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+The Project Gutenberg eBook, A Lost Leader, by E. Phillips Oppenheim,
+Illustrated by Fred Pegram
+
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+
+
+
+Title: A Lost Leader
+
+
+Author: E. Phillips Oppenheim
+
+
+
+Release Date: November 14, 2005 [eBook #17063]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+
+***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK A LOST LEADER***
+
+
+E-text prepared by Suzanne Shell, Mary Meehan, and the Project Gutenberg
+Online Distributed Proofreading Team (https://www.pgdp.net/)
+
+
+
+Note: Project Gutenberg also has an HTML version of this
+ file which includes the original illustrations.
+ See 16945-h.htm or 16945-h.zip:
+ (https://www.gutenberg.org/dirs/1/7/0/6/16945/16945-h/16945-h.htm)
+ or
+ (https://www.gutenberg.org/dirs/1/7/0/6/16945/16945-h.zip)
+
+
+
+
+
+A LOST LEADER
+
+by
+
+E. PHILLIPS OPPENHEIM
+
+Author of "A Maker of History," "Mysterious Mr. Sabin," "The Master
+Mummer," "Anna the Adventuress," Etc.
+
+Illustrated by Fred Pegram
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+Boston
+Little, Brown & Company
+
+1907
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+
+BOOK I
+
+Chapter
+
+ I Reconstruction
+
+ II The Woman with an Alias
+
+ III Wanted--A Politician
+
+ IV The Duchess Asks a Question
+
+ V The Hesitation of Mr. Mannering
+
+ VI Sacrifice
+
+ VII The Duchess's "At Home"
+
+VIII The Mannering Mystery
+
+ IX The Pumping of Mrs. Phillimore
+
+ X The Man with a Motive
+
+ XI Mannering's Alternative
+
+
+BOOK II
+
+
+ I Borrowdean makes a Bargain
+
+ II "Cherchez la Femme"
+
+ III One of the "Sufferers"
+
+ IV Debts of Honour
+
+ V Love _versus_ Politics
+
+ VI The Conscience of a Statesman
+
+ VII A Blow for Borrowdean
+
+VIII A Page from the Past
+
+ IX The Faltering of Mannering
+
+ X The End of a Dream
+
+ XI Borrowdean shows his "Hand"
+
+ XII Sir Leslie Borrowdean incurs a Heavy Debt
+
+XIII The Woman and--the Other Woman
+
+
+BOOK III
+
+ I Matrimony and an Awkward Meeting
+
+ II The Snub for Borrowdean
+
+ III Clouds--and a Call to Arms
+
+ IV Disaster
+
+ V The Journalist Intervenes
+
+ VI Treachery and a Telegram
+
+ VII Mr. Mannering, M.P.
+
+VIII Playing the Game
+
+ IX The Tragedy of a Key
+
+ X Blanche finds a Way Out
+
+
+BOOK IV
+
+
+ I The Persistency of Borrowdean
+
+ II Hester Thinks it "A Great Pity"
+
+ III Summoned to Windsor
+
+ IV Checkmate to Borrowdean
+
+ V A Brazen Proceeding
+
+
+
+
+A LOST LEADER
+
+
+
+
+BOOK I
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+RECONSTRUCTION
+
+
+The two men stood upon the top of a bank bordering the rough road which
+led to the sea. They were listening to the lark, which had risen
+fluttering from their feet a moment or so ago, and was circling now above
+their heads. Mannering, with a quiet smile, pointed upwards.
+
+"There, my friend!" he exclaimed. "You can listen now to arguments more
+eloquent than any which I could ever frame. That little creature is
+singing the true, uncorrupted song of life. He sings of the sunshine, the
+buoyant air; the pure and simple joy of existence is beating in his
+little heart. The things which lie behind the hills will never sadden
+him. His kingdom is here, and he is content."
+
+Borrowdean's smile was a little cynical. He was essentially of that order
+of men who are dwellers in cities, and even the sting of the salt breeze
+blowing across the marshes--marshes riven everywhere with long arms of
+the sea--could bring no colour to his pale cheeks.
+
+"Your little bird--a lark, I think you called it," he remarked, "may be a
+very eloquent prophet for the whole kingdom of his species, but the song
+of life for a bird and that for a man are surely different things!"
+
+"Not so very different after all," Mannering answered, still watching the
+bird. "The longer one lives, the more clearly one recognizes the absolute
+universality of life."
+
+Borrowdean shrugged his shoulders, with a little gesture of impatience.
+He had left London at a moment when he could ill be spared, and had not
+travelled to this out-of-the-way corner of the kingdom to exchange
+purposeless platitudes with a man whose present attitude towards life at
+any rate he heartily despised. He seated himself upon a half-broken rail,
+and lit a cigarette.
+
+"Mannering," he said, "I did not come here to simper cheap philosophies
+with you like a couple of schoolgirls. I have a real live errand. I want
+to speak to you of great things."
+
+Mannering moved a little uneasily. He had a very shrewd idea as to the
+nature of that errand.
+
+"Of great things," he repeated slowly. "Are you in earnest, Borrowdean?"
+
+"Why not?"
+
+"Because," Mannering continued, "I have left the world of great things,
+as you and I used to regard them, very far behind. I am glad to see you
+here, of course, but I cannot think of any serious subject which it would
+be useful or profitable for us to discuss. You understand me, Borrowdean,
+I am sure!"
+
+Borrowdean closely eyed this man who once had been his friend.
+
+"The old sore still rankles, then, Mannering," he said. "Has time done
+nothing to heal it?"
+
+Mannering laughed easily.
+
+"How can you think me such a child?" he exclaimed. "If Rochester himself
+were to come to see me he would be as welcome as you are. In fact," he
+continued, more seriously, "if you could only realize, my friend, how
+peaceful and happy life here may be, amongst the quiet places, you would
+believe me at once when I assure you that I can feel nothing but
+gratitude towards those people and those circumstances which impelled me
+to seek it."
+
+"What should you think, then," Borrowdean asked, watching his friend
+through half-closed eyes, "of those who sought to drag you from it?"
+
+Mannering's laugh was as free and natural as the wind itself. He had
+bared his head, and had turned directly seawards.
+
+"Hatred, my dear Borrowdean," he declared, "if I thought that they had a
+single chance of success. As it is--indifference."
+
+Borrowdean's eyebrows were raised. He held his cigarette between his
+fingers, and looked at it for several moments.
+
+"Yet I am here," he said slowly, "for no other purpose."
+
+Mannering turned and faced his friend.
+
+"All I can say is that I am sorry to hear it," he declared. "I know the
+sort of man you are, Borrowdean, and I know very well that if you have
+come down here with something to say to me you will say it. Therefore go
+on. Let us have it over."
+
+Borrowdean stood up. His tone acquired a new earnestness. He became at
+once more of a man. The cynical curve of his lips had vanished.
+
+"We are on the eve of great opportunities, Mannering," he said. "Six
+months ago the result of the next General Election seemed assured. We
+appeared to be as far off any chance of office as a political party could
+be. To-day the whole thing is changed. We are on the eve of a general
+reconstruction. It is our one great chance of this generation. I come to
+you as a patriot. Rochester asks you to forget."
+
+Mannering held up his hand.
+
+"Stop one moment, Borrowdean," he said. "I want you to understand this
+once and for all. I have no grievance against Rochester. The old wound,
+if it ever amounted to that, is healed. If Rochester were here at this
+moment I would take his hand cheerfully. But--"
+
+"Ah! There is a but, then," Borrowdean interrupted.
+
+"There is a but," Mannering assented. "You may find it hard to
+understand, but here is the truth. I have lost all taste for public life.
+The whole thing is rotten, Borrowdean, rotten from beginning to end. I
+have had enough of it to last me all my days. Party policy must come
+before principle. A man's individuality, his whole character, is assailed
+and suborned on every side. There is but one life, one measure of days,
+that you or I know anything of. It doesn't last very long. The months and
+years have a knack of slipping away emptily enough unless we are always
+standing to attention. Therefore I think that it becomes our duty to
+consider very carefully, almost religiously, how best to use them. Come
+here for a moment, Borrowdean. I want to show you something."
+
+The two men stood side by side upon the grassy bank, Mannering
+broad-shouldered and vigorous, his clean, hard-cut features tanned with
+wind and sun, his eyes bright and vigorous with health; Leslie
+Borrowdean, once his greatest friend, a man of almost similar physique,
+but with the bent frame and listless pallor of a dweller in the crowded
+places of life. Without enthusiasm his tired eyes followed the sweep of
+Mannering's arm.
+
+"You see those yellow sandhills beyond the marshes there? Behind them is
+the sea. Do you catch that breath of wind? Take off your hat, man, and
+get it into your lungs. It comes from the North Sea, salt and fresh and
+sweet. I think that it is the purest thing on earth. You can walk here
+for miles and miles in the open, and the wind is like God's own music.
+Borrowdean, I am going to say things to you which one says but once or
+twice in his life. I came to this country a soured man, cynical, a
+pessimist, a materialist by training and environment. To-day I speak of a
+God with bowed head, for I believe that somewhere behind all these
+beautiful things their prototype must exist. Don't think I've turned
+ranter. I've never spoken like this to any one else before, and I don't
+suppose I ever shall again. Here is Nature, man, the greatest force on
+earth, the mother, the mistress, beneficent, wonderful! You are a
+creature of cities. Stay with me here for a day or two, and the joy of
+all these things will steal into your blood. You, too, will know what
+peace is."
+
+Borrowdean, as though unconsciously, straightened himself. If no colour
+came to his cheeks, the light of battle was at least in his eyes. This
+man was speaking heresies. The words sprang to his lips.
+
+"Peace!" he exclaimed, scornfully. "Peace is for the dead. The last
+reward perhaps of a breaking heart. The life effective, militant, is
+the only possible existence for men. Pull yourself together, Mannering,
+for Heaven's sake. Yours is the _faineant_ spirit of the decadent,
+masquerading in the garb of a sham primitivism. Were you born into the
+world, do you think, to loiter through life an idle worshipper at the
+altar of beauty? Who are you to dare to skulk in the quiet places, whilst
+the battle of life is fought by others?"
+
+Another lark had risen almost from their feet, and, circling its way
+upwards, was breaking into song. And below, the full spring tide was
+filling the pools and creeks with the softly flowing, glimmering
+sea-water. The fishing boats, high and dry an hour ago, were passing now
+seaward along the silvery way. All these things Mannering was watching
+with rapt eyes, even whilst he listened to his companion.
+
+"Dear friend," he said, "the world can get on very well without me, and
+I have no need of the world. The battle that you speak of--well, I have
+been in the fray, as you know. The memory of it is still a nightmare to
+me."
+
+Borrowdean had the appearance of a man who sought to put a restraint upon
+his words. He was silent for a moment, and then he spoke very
+deliberately.
+
+"Mannering," he said, "do not think me wholly unsympathetic. There is a
+side of me which sympathises deeply with every word which you have said.
+And there is another which forces me to remind you again, and again, that
+we men were never born to linger in the lotos lands of the world. You do
+not stand for yourself alone. You exist as a unit of humanity. Think of
+your responsibilities. You have found for yourself a beautiful corner of
+the world. That is all very well for you, but how about the rest? How
+about the millions who are chained to the cities that they may earn their
+living pittance, whose wives and children fill the churchyards, the
+echoes of whose weary, never-ceasing cry must reach you even here? They
+are the people, the sufferers, fellow-links with you in the chain of
+humanity. You may stand aloof as you will, but you can never cut yourself
+wholly away from the great family of your fellows. You may hide from your
+responsibilities, but the burden of them will lie heavy upon your
+conscience, the poison will penetrate sometimes into your most jealously
+guarded paradise. We are of the people's party, you and I, Mannering, and
+I tell you that the tocsin has sounded. We need you!"
+
+A shadow had fallen upon Mannering's face. Borrowdean was in earnest, and
+his appeal was scarcely one to be treated lightly. Nevertheless,
+Mannering showed no sign of faltering, though his tone was certainly
+graver.
+
+"Leslie," he said, "you speak like a prophet, but believe me, my mind is
+made up. I have taken root here. Such work as I can do from my study is,
+as it always has been, at your service. But I myself have finished with
+actual political life. Don't press me too hard. I must seem churlish and
+ungrateful, but if I listened to you for hours the result would be the
+same. I have finished with actual political life."
+
+Borrowdean shrugged his shoulders despairingly. Such a man was hard to
+deal with.
+
+"Mannering," he protested, "you must not, you really must not, send me
+away like this. You speak of your written work. Don't think that I
+underestimate it because I have not alluded to it before. I myself
+honestly believe that it was those wonderful articles of yours in the
+_Nineteenth Century_ which brought back to a reasonable frame of mind
+thousands who were half led away by the glamour of this new campaign. You
+kindled the torch, my friend, and you must bear it to victory. You bring
+me to my last resource. If you will not serve under Rochester, come
+back--and Rochester will serve under you when the time comes."
+
+Mannering shook his head slowly.
+
+"I wish I could convince you," he said, "once and for all, that my
+refusal springs from no such reasons as you seem to imagine. I would
+sooner sit here, with a volume of Pater or Meredith, and this west wind
+blowing in my face, than I would hear myself acclaimed Prime Minister of
+England. Let us abandon this discussion once and for all, Borrowdean. We
+have arrived at a cul-de-sac, and I have spoken my last word."
+
+Borrowdean threw his half-finished cigarette into the ever-widening creek
+below. It was characteristic of the man that his face showed no sign of
+disappointment. Only for several moments he kept silence.
+
+"Come," Mannering said at last. "Let us make our way back to the house.
+If you are resolved to get back to town to-night, we ought to be thinking
+about luncheon."
+
+"Thank you," Borrowdean said. "I must return."
+
+They started to walk inland, but they had taken only a few steps when
+they both, as though by a common impulse, stopped. An unfamiliar sound
+had broken in upon the deep silence of this quiet land. Borrowdean, who
+was a few paces ahead, pointed to the bend in the road below, and turned
+towards his companion with a little gesture of cynical amusement.
+
+"Behold," he exclaimed, "the invasion of modernity. Even your
+time-forgotten paradise, Mannering, has its civilizations, then. What an
+anachronism!"
+
+With a cloud of dust behind, and with the sun flashing upon its polished
+metal parts, a motor car swung into sight, and came rushing towards them.
+Borrowdean, always a keen observer of trifles, noticed the change in
+Mannering's face.
+
+"It is a neighbour of mine," he remarked. "She is on her way to the golf
+links."
+
+"Golf links!" Borrowdean exclaimed.
+
+Mannering nodded.
+
+"Behind the sandhills there," he remarked.
+
+There was a grinding of brakes. The car came to a standstill below. A
+woman, who sat alone in the back seat, raised her veil and looked
+upwards.
+
+"Am I late?" she asked. "Clara has gone on--they told me!"
+
+She had addressed Mannering, but her eyes seemed suddenly drawn to
+Borrowdean. As though dazzled by the sun, she dropped her veil.
+Borrowdean was standing as though turned to stone, perfectly rigid and
+motionless. His face was like a still, white mask.
+
+"I am so sorry," Mannering said, "but I have had a most unexpected visit
+from an old friend. May I introduce Sir Leslie Borrowdean--Mrs.
+Handsell!"
+
+The lady in the car bent her head, and Borrowdean performed an automatic
+salute. Mannering continued:
+
+"I am afraid that I must throw myself upon your mercy! Sir Leslie insists
+upon returning this afternoon, and I am taking him back for an early
+luncheon. You will find Clara and Lindsay at the golf club. May we have
+our foursome to-morrow?"
+
+"Certainly! I will not keep you for a moment. I must hurry now, or the
+tide will be over the road."
+
+She motioned the driver to proceed, but Borrowdean interposed.
+
+"Mannering," he said, "I am afraid that the poison of your lotos land is
+beginning to work already. May I stay until to-morrow and walk round with
+you whilst you play your foursome? I should enjoy it immensely."
+
+Mannering looked at his friend for a moment in amazement. Then he laughed
+heartily.
+
+"By all means!" he answered. "Our foursome stands, then, Mrs. Handsell.
+This way, Borrowdean!"
+
+The two men turned once more seaward, walking in single file along the
+top of the grassy bank. The woman in the car inclined her head, and
+motioned the driver to proceed.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+
+THE WOMAN WITH AN ALIAS
+
+
+Borrowdean seemed after all to take but little interest in the game. He
+walked generally, some distance away from the players, on the top of the
+low bank of sandhills which fringed the sea. He was one of those men whom
+solitude never wearies, a weaver of carefully thought-out schemes, no
+single detail of which was ever left to chance or impulse. Such moments
+as these were valuable to him. He bared his head to the breeze, stopped
+to listen to the larks, watched the sea-gulls float low over the lapping
+waters, without paying the slightest attention to any one of them. The
+instinctive cunning which never deserted him led him without any
+conscious effort to assume a pleasure in these things which, as a matter
+of fact, he found entirely meaningless. It led him, too, to choose a
+retired spot for those periods of intensely close observation to which he
+every now and then subjected his host and the woman who was now his
+partner in the game. What he saw entirely satisfied him. Yet the way was
+scarcely clear.
+
+They caught him up near one of the greens, and he stood with his hands
+behind him, and his eyeglass securely fixed, gravely watching them
+approach and put for the hole. To him the whole performance seemed
+absolutely idiotic, but he showed no sign of anything save a mild and
+genial interest. Clara, Mannering's niece, who was immensely impressed
+with him, lingered behind.
+
+"Don't you really care for any games at all, Sir Leslie?" she asked.
+
+He shook his head.
+
+"I know that you think me a barbarian," he remarked, smiling.
+
+"On the contrary," she declared, "that is probably what you think us. I
+suppose they are really a waste of time when one has other things to do!
+Only down here, you see, there is nothing else to do."
+
+He looked at her thoughtfully. He had never yet in his life spoken half a
+dozen words with man, woman or child without wondering whether they might
+not somehow or other contribute towards his scheme of life. Clara
+Mannering was pretty, and no doubt foolish. She lived alone with her
+uncle, and possibly had some influence over him. It was certainly worth
+while.
+
+"I do not know you nearly well enough, Miss Mannering," he said, smiling,
+"to tell you what I really think. But I can assure you that you don't
+seem a barbarian to me at all."
+
+She was suddenly grave. It was her turn to play a stroke. She examined
+the ball, carefully selected a club from her bag, and with a long, easy
+swing sent it flying towards the hole.
+
+"Wonderful!" he murmured.
+
+She looked up at him and laughed.
+
+"Tell me what you are thinking," she insisted.
+
+"That if I played golf," he answered, "I should like to be able to play
+like that."
+
+"But you must have played games sometimes," she insisted.
+
+"When I was at Eton--" he murmured.
+
+Mannering looked back, smiling.
+
+"He was in the Eton Eleven, Clara, and stroked his boat at college. Don't
+you believe all he tells you."
+
+"I shall not believe another word," she declared.
+
+"I hope you don't mean it," he protested, "or I must remain dumb."
+
+"You want to go off and tramp along the ridges by yourself," she
+declared. "Confess!"
+
+"On the contrary," he answered, "I should like to carry that bag for you
+and hand out the--er--implements."
+
+She unslung it at once from her shoulder.
+
+"You have rushed upon your fate," she said. "Now let me fasten it for
+you."
+
+"Is there any remuneration?" he inquired, anxiously.
+
+"You mercenary person! Stand still now, I am going to play. Well, what do
+you expect?"
+
+"I am not acquainted with the usual charges," he answered, "but to judge
+from the weight of the clubs--"
+
+"Give me them back, then," she cried.
+
+"Nothing," he declared, firmly, "would induce me to relinquish them.
+I will leave the matter of remuneration entirely in your hands. I am
+convinced that you have a generous disposition."
+
+"The usual charge," she remarked, "is tenpence, and twopence for lunch."
+
+"I will take it in kind!" he said.
+
+She laughed gaily.
+
+"Give me a mashie, please."
+
+He peered into the bag.
+
+"Which of these clubs now," he asked, "rejoices in that weird name?"
+
+She helped herself, and played her shot.
+
+"I couldn't think," she said, firmly, "of paying the full price to a
+caddie who doesn't know what a mashie is."
+
+"I will be thankful," he murmured, "for whatever you may give me--even if
+it should be that carnation you are wearing."
+
+She shook her head.
+
+"It is worth more than tenpence," she said.
+
+"Perhaps by extra diligence," he suggested, "I might deserve a little
+extra. By the bye, why does your partner, Mr. Lindsay, isn't it, walk by
+himself all the time?"
+
+"He probably thinks," she answered, demurely, "that I am too familiar
+with my caddie."
+
+"You will understand," he said, earnestly, "that if my behaviour is not
+strictly correct it is entirely owing to ignorance. I have no idea as to
+the exact position a caddie should take up."
+
+"What a pity you are going away so soon," she said. "I might have given
+you lessons."
+
+"Don't tempt me," he begged. "I can assure you that without me the
+constitution of this country would collapse within a week."
+
+She looked at him--properly awed.
+
+"What a wonderful person you are!"
+
+"I am glad," he said, meekly, "that you are beginning to appreciate me."
+
+"As a caddie," she remarked, "you are not, I must confess, wholly
+perfect. For instance, your attention should be entirely devoted to the
+person whose clubs you are carrying, instead of which you talk to me and
+watch Mrs. Handsell."
+
+He was almost taken aback. For a pretty girl she was really not so much
+of a fool as he had thought her.
+
+"I deny it _in toto_!" he declared.
+
+"Ah, but I know you," she answered. "You are a politician, and you would
+deny anything. Don't you think her very handsome?"
+
+Borrowdean gravely considered the matter, which was in itself a somewhat
+humorous thing. Slim and erect, with a long, graceful neck, and a
+carriage of the head which somehow suggested the environment of a court,
+Mrs. Handsell was distinctly, even from a distance, a pleasant person to
+look upon. He nodded approvingly.
+
+"Yes, she is good-looking," he admitted. "Is she a neighbour of yours?"
+
+"She has taken a house within a hundred yards of ours," Clara Mannering
+answered. "We all think that she is delightful."
+
+"Is she a widow?" Borrowdean asked.
+
+"I imagine so," she answered. "I have never heard her speak of her
+husband. She has beautiful dresses and things. I should think she must be
+very rich. Stand quite still, please. I must take great pains over this
+stroke."
+
+A wild shot from Clara's partner a few minutes later resulted in a
+scattering of the little party, searching for the ball. For the first
+time Borrowdean found himself near Mrs. Handsell.
+
+"I must have a few words with you before I go back," he said,
+nonchalantly.
+
+"Say that you would like to try my motor car," she answered. "What do you
+want here?"
+
+"I came to see Mannering."
+
+"Poor Mannering!"
+
+"It would be," he remarked, smoothly, "a mistake to quarrel."
+
+They separated, and immediately afterwards the ball was found. A little
+later on the round was finished. Clara attributed her success to the
+excellence of her caddie. Mrs. Handsell deplored a headache, which had
+put her off her putting. Lindsay, who was in a bad temper, declined an
+invitation to lunch, and rode off on his bicycle. The rest of the little
+party gathered round the motor car, and Borrowdean asked preposterous
+questions about the gears and the speeds.
+
+"If you are really interested," Mrs. Handsell said, languidly, "I will
+take you home. I have only room for one, unfortunately, with all these
+clubs and things."
+
+"I should be delighted," Borrowdean answered, "but perhaps Miss
+Mannering--"
+
+"Clara will look after me," Mannering interrupted, smiling. "Try to make
+an enthusiast of him, Mrs. Handsell. He needs a hobby badly."
+
+They started off. She leaned back in her seat and pulled her veil down.
+
+"Do not talk to me here," she said. "We shall have a quarter of an hour
+before they can arrive."
+
+Borrowdean assented silently. He was glad of the respite, for he wanted
+to think. A few minutes' swift rush through the air, and the car pulled
+up before a queer, old-fashioned dwelling house in the middle of the
+village. A smart maid-servant came hurrying out to assist her mistress.
+Borrowdean was ushered into a long, low drawing-room, with open windows
+leading out on to a trim lawn. Beyond was a walled garden bordering the
+churchyard.
+
+Mrs. Handsell came back almost immediately. Borrowdean, turning his head
+as she entered, found himself studying her with a new curiosity. Yes, she
+was a beautiful woman. She had lost nothing. Her complexion--a little
+tanned, perhaps--was as fresh and soft as a girl's, her smile as
+delightfully full of humour as ever. Not a speck of grey in her black
+hair, not a shadow of embarrassment. A wonderful woman!
+
+"The one thing which we have no time to do is to stand and look at one
+another," she declared. "However, since you have tried to stare me out of
+countenance, what do you find?"
+
+"I find you unchanged," he answered, gravely.
+
+"Naturally! I have found a panacea for all the woes of life. Now what do
+you want down here?"
+
+"Mannering!"
+
+"Of course. But you won't get him. He declares that he has finished with
+politics, and I never knew a man so thoroughly in earnest."
+
+Borrowdean smiled.
+
+"No man has ever finished with politics!"
+
+"A platitude," she declared. "As for Mannering, well, for the first few
+weeks I felt about him as I suppose you do now. I know him better now,
+and I have changed my mind. He is unique, absolutely unique! Do you think
+that I could have existed here for nearly two months without him?"
+
+"May I inquire," Borrowdean asked, blandly, "how much longer you intend
+to exist here with him?"
+
+She shrugged her shoulders.
+
+"All my days--perhaps! He and this place together are an anchorage. Look
+at me! Am I not a different woman? I know you too well, my dear Leslie,
+to attempt your conversion, but I can assure you that I am--very nearly
+in earnest!"
+
+"You interest me amazingly," he remarked, smiling. "May I ask, does
+Mannering know you as Mrs. Handsell only?"
+
+"Of course!"
+
+"This," he continued, "is not the Garden of Eden. I may be the first, but
+others will come who will surely recognize you."
+
+"I must risk it," she answered.
+
+Borrowdean swung his eyeglass backwards and forwards. All the time he was
+thinking intensely.
+
+"How long have you been here?" he asked.
+
+"Very nearly two months," she answered. "Imagine it!"
+
+"Quite long enough for your little idyll," he said. "Come, you know what
+the end of it must be. We need Mannering! Help us!"
+
+"Not I," she answered, coolly. "You must do without him for the present."
+
+"You are our natural ally," he protested. "We need your help now. You
+know very well that with a slip of the tongue I could change the whole
+situation."
+
+"Somehow," she said, "I do not think that you are likely to make that
+slip."
+
+"Why not?" he protested. "I begin to understand Mannering's firmness now.
+You are one of the ropes which hold him to this petty life--to this
+philandering amongst the flower-pots. You are one of the ropes I want to
+cut. Why not, indeed? I think that I could do it."
+
+"Do you want a bribe?"
+
+"I want Mannering."
+
+"So do I!"
+
+"He can belong to you none the less for belonging to us politically."
+
+"Possibly! But I prefer him here. As a recluse he is adorable. I do not
+want him to go through the mill."
+
+"You don't understand his importance to us," Borrowdean declared. "This
+is really no light affair. Rochester and Mellors both believe in him.
+There is no limit to what he might not ask."
+
+"He has told me a dozen times," she said, "that he never means to sit in
+Parliament again."
+
+"There is no reason why he should not change his mind," Borrowdean
+answered. "Between us, I think that we could induce him."
+
+"Perhaps," she answered. "Only I do not mean to try."
+
+"I wish I could make you understand," he said impatiently, "that I am in
+deadly earnest."
+
+"You threaten?"
+
+"Don't call it that."
+
+"Very well, then," she declared, "I will tell him the truth myself."
+
+"That," he answered, "is all that I should dare to ask. He would come to
+us to-morrow."
+
+"You used not to underrate me," she murmured, with a glance towards the
+mirror.
+
+"There is no other man like Mannering," he said. "He abhors any form of
+deceit. He would forgive a murderer, but never a liar."
+
+"My dear Leslie," she said, "as a friend--and a relative--"
+
+"Neither counts," he interrupted. "I am a politician."
+
+She sat quite still, looking away from him. The peaceful noises from the
+village street found their way into the room. A few cows were making
+their leisurely mid-day journey towards the pasturage, a baker's cart
+came rattling round the corner. The west wind was rustling in the elms,
+bending the shrubs upon the lawn almost to the ground. She watched them
+idly, already a little shrivelled and tarnished with their endless
+struggle for life.
+
+"I do not wish to be melodramatic," she said, slowly, "but you are
+forcing me into a corner. You know that I am rich. You know the people
+with whom I have influence. I want to purchase Lawrence Mannering's
+immunity from your schemes. Can you name no price which I could pay? You
+and I know one another fairly well. You are an egoist, pure and simple.
+Politics are nothing to you save a personal affair. You play the game of
+life in the first person singular. Let me pay his quittance."
+
+Borrowdean regarded her thoughtfully.
+
+"You are a strange woman," he said. "In a few months' time, when you are
+back in the thick of it all, you will be as anxious to have him there as
+we are. You will not be able to understand how you could ever have wished
+differently. This is rank sentiment, you know, which you have been
+talking. Mannering here is a wasted power. His life is an unnatural one."
+
+"He is happy," she objected.
+
+"How do you know? Will he be as happy, I wonder, when you have gone, when
+there is no longer a Mrs. Handsell? I think not! You are one of the first
+to whom I should have looked for help in this matter. You owe it to us.
+We have a right to demand it. For myself personally I have no life now
+outside the life political. I am tired of being in opposition. I want to
+hold office. One mounts the ladder very slowly. I see my way in a few
+months to going up two rungs at a time. We want Mannering. We must have
+him. Don't force me to make that slip of the tongue."
+
+The sound of a gong came through the open window. She rose to her feet.
+
+"We are keeping them waiting for luncheon," she remarked. "I will think
+over what you have said."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III
+
+WANTED--A POLITICIAN
+
+
+Sir Leslie carefully closed the iron gate behind him, and looked around.
+
+"But where," he asked, "are the roses?"
+
+Clara laughed outright.
+
+"You may be a great politician, Sir Leslie," she declared, "but you are
+no gardener. Roses don't bloom out of doors in May--not in these parts at
+any rate."
+
+"I understand," he assented, humbly. "This is where the roses will be."
+
+She nodded.
+
+"That wall, you see," she explained, "keeps off the north winds, and the
+chestnut grove the east. There is sun here all the day long. You should
+come to Blakely in two months' time, Sir Leslie. Everything is so
+different then."
+
+He sighed.
+
+"You forget, my dear child," he murmured, "that you are speaking to a
+slave."
+
+"A slave!" she repeated. "How absurd! You are a Cabinet Minister, are
+you not, Sir Leslie?"
+
+He shrugged his shoulders.
+
+"I was once," he answered, "until an ungrateful country grew weary of the
+monotony of perfect government and installed our opponents in our places.
+Just now we are in opposition."
+
+"In opposition," she repeated, a little vaguely.
+
+"Meaning," he explained, "that we get all the fun, no responsibility,
+and, alas, no pay."
+
+"How fascinating," she exclaimed. "Do sit down here, and tell me all
+about it. But I forgot. You are not used to sitting down out of doors.
+Perhaps you will catch cold."
+
+Sir Leslie smiled.
+
+"I am inclined to run the risk," he said gravely, "if you will share it.
+Seriously, though, these rustic seats are rather a delusion, aren't they,
+from the point of view of comfort?"
+
+"There shall be cushions," she declared, "for the next time you come."
+
+He sighed.
+
+"Ah, the next time! I dare not look forward to it. So you are interested
+in politics, Miss Mannering?"
+
+"Well, I believe I am," she answered, a little doubtfully. "To tell you
+the truth, Sir Leslie, I am shockingly ignorant. You must live in London
+to be a politician, mustn't you?"
+
+"It is necessary," he assented, "to spend some part of your time there,
+if you want to come into touch with the real thing."
+
+"Then I am very interested in politics," she declared. "Please go on."
+
+He shook his head.
+
+"I would rather you talked to me about the roses. You should ask your
+uncle to tell you all about politics. He knows far more than I do."
+
+"More than you! But you have been a Cabinet Minister!" she exclaimed.
+
+"So was your uncle once," he answered. "So he could be again whenever he
+chose."
+
+She looked at him incredulously.
+
+"You don't really mean that, Sir Leslie?"
+
+"Indeed I do!" he asserted. "There was never a man within my recollection
+or knowledge who in so short a time made for himself a position so
+brilliant as your uncle. There is no man to-day whose written word
+carries so much weight with the people."
+
+She sighed a little doubtfully.
+
+"Then if that is so," she said, "I cannot imagine why we live down here,
+hundreds of miles away from everywhere. Why did he give it up? Why is he
+not in Parliament now?"
+
+"It is to ask him that question, Miss Mannering," Borrowdean said, "that
+I am here. No wonder it seems surprising to you. It is surprising to all
+of us."
+
+She looked at him eagerly.
+
+"You mean, then, that you--that his party want him to go back?" she
+asked.
+
+"Assuredly!"
+
+"You have told him this?"
+
+"Of course! It was my mission!"
+
+"Sir Leslie, you must tell me what he said."
+
+Borrowdean sighed.
+
+"My dear young lady," he said, "it is rather a painful subject with me
+just now. Yet since you insist, I will tell you. Something has come over
+your uncle which I do not understand. His party--no, it is his country
+that needs him. He prefers to stay here, and watch his roses blossom."
+
+"It is wicked of him!" she declared, energetically.
+
+"It is inexplicable," he agreed. "Yet I have used every argument which
+can well be urged."
+
+"Oh, you must think of others," she begged. "If you knew how weary one
+gets of this place--a man, too, like my uncle! How can he be content? The
+monotony here is enough to drive even a dull person like myself mad. To
+choose such a life, actually to choose it, is insanity!"
+
+Borrowdean raised his head. He had heard the click of the garden gate.
+
+"They are coming," he said. "I wish you would talk to your uncle like
+this."
+
+"I only wish," she answered, passionately, "that I could make him feel as
+I do."
+
+They entered the garden, Mannering, bareheaded, following his guest.
+Borrowdean watched them closely as they approached. The woman's
+expression was purely negative. There was nothing to be learned from the
+languid smile with which she recognized their presence. Upon Mannering,
+however, the cloud seemed already to have fallen. His eyebrows were set
+in a frown. He had the appearance of a man in some manner perplexed. He
+carried two telegrams, which he handed over to Borrowdean.
+
+"A boy on a bicycle," he remarked, "is waiting for answers. Two telegrams
+at once is a thing wholly unheard of here, Borrowdean. You really ought
+not to have disturbed our postal service to such an extent."
+
+Borrowdean smiled as he tore them open.
+
+"I think," he said, "that I can guess their contents. Yes, I thought so.
+Can you send me to the station, Mannering?"
+
+"I can--if it is necessary," Mannering answered. "Must you really go?"
+
+Borrowdean nodded.
+
+"I must be in the House to-night," he said, a little wearily. "Rochester
+is going for them again."
+
+"You didn't take a pair?" Mannering asked.
+
+"It isn't altogether that," Borrowdean answered, "though Heaven knows we
+can't spare a single vote just now. Rochester wants me to speak. We are a
+used-up lot, and no mistake. We want new blood, Mannering!"
+
+"I trust that the next election," Mannering said, "may supply you with
+it. Will you walk round to the stables with me? I must order a cart for
+you."
+
+"I shall be glad to," Borrowdean answered.
+
+They walked side by side through the chestnut grove. Borrowdean laid his
+hand upon his friend's arm.
+
+"Mannering," he said, slowly, "am I to take it that you have spoken your
+last word? I am to write my mission down a failure?"
+
+"A failure without doubt, so far as regards its immediate object,"
+Mannering assented. "For the rest, it has been very pleasant to see you
+again, and I only wish that you could spare us a few more days."
+
+Borrowdean shook his head.
+
+"We are better apart just now, Mannering," he said, "for I tell you
+frankly that I do not understand your present attitude towards life--your
+entire absence of all sense of moral responsibility. Are you indeed
+willing to be written down in history as a philanderer in great things,
+to loiter in your flower gardens, whilst other men fight the battle of
+life for you and your fellows? Persist in your refusal to help us, if you
+will, Mannering, but before I go you shall at least hear the truth."
+
+Mannering smiled.
+
+"Be precise, my dear friend. I shall hear your view of the truth!"
+
+"I do not accept the correction," Borrowdean answered, quickly. "There
+are times when a man can make no mistake, and this is one of them. You
+shall hear the truth from me this afternoon, and when your days here have
+been spun out to their limit--your days of sybaritic idleness--you shall
+hear it again, only it will be too late. You are fighting against Nature,
+Mannering. You were born to rule, to be master over men. You have that
+nameless gift of genius--power--the gift of swaying the minds and hearts
+of your fellow men. Once you accepted your destiny. Your feet were firmly
+planted upon the great ladder. You could have climbed--where you would."
+
+A curious quietness seemed to have crept over Mannering. When he
+answered, his voice seemed to rise scarcely above a whisper.
+
+"My friend," he said, "it was not worth while!"
+
+Borrowdean was almost angry.
+
+"Not worth while," he repeated, contemptuously. "Is it worth while, then,
+to play golf, to linger in your flower gardens, to become a dilettante
+student, to dream away your days in the idleness of a purely enervating
+culture? What is it that I heard you yourself say once--that life apart
+from one's fellows must always lack robustness. You have the instincts of
+the creator, Mannering. You cannot stifle them. Some day the cry of the
+world to its own children will find its echo in your heart, and it may be
+too late. For sooner or later, my friend, the place of all men on earth
+is filled."
+
+For a moment that somewhat cynical restraint which seemed to divest of
+enthusiasm Borrowdean's most earnest words, and which militated somewhat
+against his reputation as a public speaker, seemed to have fallen from
+him. Mannering, recognizing it, answered him gravely enough, though with
+no less decision.
+
+"If you are right, Borrowdean," he said, "the suffering will be mine.
+Come, your time is short now. Perhaps you had better make your adieux to
+my niece and Mrs. Handsell."
+
+They all came out into the drive to see him start. A curious change had
+come over the bright spring day. A grey sea-fog had drifted inland, the
+sunlight was obscured, the larks were silent. Borrowdean shivered a
+little as he turned up his coat-collar.
+
+"So Nature has her little caprices, even--in paradise!" he remarked.
+
+"It will blow over in an hour," Mannering said. "A breath of wind, and
+the whole thing is gone."
+
+Borrowdean's farewells were of the briefest. He made no further allusion
+to the object of his visit. He departed as one who had been paying an
+afternoon call more or less agreeable. Clara waved her hand until he was
+out of sight, then she turned somewhat abruptly round and entered the
+house. Mannering and Mrs. Handsell remained for a few moments in the
+avenue, looking along the road. The sound of the horse's feet could still
+be heard, but the trap itself was long since invisible.
+
+"The passing of your friend," she remarked, quietly, "is almost
+allegorical. He has gone into the land of ghosts--or are we the ghosts,
+I wonder, who loiter here?"
+
+Mannering answered her without a touch of levity. He, too, was unusually
+serious.
+
+"We have the better part," he said. "Yet Borrowdean is one of those men
+who know very well how to play upon the heartstrings. A human being is
+like a musical instrument to him. He knows how to find out the harmonies
+or strike the discords."
+
+She turned away.
+
+"I am superstitious," she murmured, with a little shiver. "I suppose that
+it is this ghostly mist, and the silence which has come with it. Yet I
+wish that your friend had stayed away from Blakely!"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Upstairs from her window Clara also was gazing along the road where
+Borrowdean had disappeared. And Borrowdean himself was puzzling over a
+third telegram which Mannering had carelessly passed on to him with his
+own, and which, although it was clearly addressed to Mannering, he had,
+after a few minutes' hesitation, opened. It had been handed in at the
+Strand Post-office.
+
+ "I must see you this week.--Blanche."
+
+A few hours later, on his arrival in London, Borrowdean repeated this
+message to Mannering from the same post-office, and quietly tearing up
+the original went down to the House.
+
+"I cannot tell," he reported to his chief, "whether we have succeeded or
+not. In a fortnight or less we shall know."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV
+
+THE DUCHESS ASKS A QUESTION
+
+
+Clara stepped through the high French window, and with skirts a little
+raised crossed the lawn. Lindsay, who was following her, stopped to
+light a cigarette.
+
+"We're getting frightfully modern," she remarked, turning and waiting for
+him. "Mrs. Handsell and I ought to have come out here, and you and uncle
+ought to have stayed and yawned at one another over the dinner-table."
+
+"You have an excellent preceptress--in modernity," he remarked. "May I?"
+
+"If you mean smoke, of course you may," she answered. "But you may not
+say or think horrid things about my best friend. She's a dear, wonderful
+woman, and I'm sure uncle has not been like the same man since she came."
+
+"I'm glad you appreciate that," he answered. "Do you honestly think he's
+any the better for it?"
+
+"I think he's immensely improved," she answered. "He doesn't grub about
+by himself nearly so much, and he's had his hair cut. I'm sure he looks
+years younger."
+
+"Do you think that he seems quite as contented?"
+
+"Contented!" she repeated, scornfully. "That's just like you, Richard. He
+hasn't any right to be contented. No one has. It is the one absolutely
+fatal state."
+
+He stretched himself out upon, the seat, and frowned.
+
+"You're picking up some strange ideas, Clara," he remarked.
+
+"Well, if I am, that's better than being contented to all eternity with
+the old ones," she replied. "Mrs. Handsell is doing us all no end of
+good. She makes us think! We all ought to think, Richard."
+
+"What on earth for?"
+
+"You are really hopeless," she murmured. "So bucolic--"
+
+"Thanks," he interrupted. "I seem to recognize the inspiration. I hate
+that woman."
+
+"My dear Richard!" she exclaimed.
+
+"Well, I do!" he persisted. "When she first came she was all right. That
+fellow Borrowdean seems to have done all the mischief."
+
+"Poor Sir Leslie!" she exclaimed, demurely. "I thought him so
+delightful."
+
+"Obviously," he replied. "I didn't. I hate a fellow who doesn't do things
+himself, and has a way of looking on which makes you feel a perfect
+idiot. Neither Mr. Mannering nor Mrs. Handsell--nor you--have been the
+same since he was here."
+
+"I gather," she said, softly, "that you do not find us improved."
+
+"I do not," he answered, stolidly. "Mrs. Handsell has begun to talk to
+you now about London, of the theatres, the dressmakers, Hurlingham,
+Ranelagh, race meetings, society, and all that sort of rot. She talks of
+them very cleverly. She knows how to make the tinsel sparkle like real
+gold."
+
+She laughed softly.
+
+"You are positively eloquent, Richard," she declared. "Do go on!"
+
+"Then she goes for your uncle," he continued, without heeding her
+interruption. "She speaks of Parliament, of great causes, of ambition,
+until his eyes are on fire. She describes new pleasures to you, and you
+sit at her feet, a mute worshipper! I can't think why she ever came here.
+She's absolutely the wrong sort of woman for a quiet country place like
+this. I wish I'd never let her the place."
+
+"You are a very foolish person," she answered. "She came here simply
+because she was weary of cities and wanted to get as far away from them
+as possible. Only last night she said that she would be content never to
+breathe the air of a town again."
+
+Lindsay tossed his cigarette away impatiently.
+
+"Oh, I know exactly her way of saying that sort of thing!" he exclaimed.
+"A moment later she would be describing very cleverly, and a little
+regretfully, some wonderful sight or other only to be found in London."
+
+"Really," she declared, "I am getting afraid of you. You are more
+observant than I thought."
+
+"There is one gift, at least," he answered, "which we country folk are
+supposed to possess. We know truth when we see it. But I am saying more
+than I have any right to. I don't want to make you angry, Clara!"
+
+She shook her head.
+
+"You won't do that," she said. "But I don't think you quite understand.
+Let me tell you something. You know that I am an orphan, don't you? I do
+not remember my father at all, and I can only just remember my mother. I
+was brought up at a pleasant but very dreary boarding-school. I had very
+few friends, and no one came to see me except my uncle, who was always
+very kind, but always in a desperate hurry. I stayed there until I was
+seventeen. Then my uncle came and fetched me, and brought me straight
+here. Now that is exactly what my life has been. What do you think of
+it?"
+
+"Very dull indeed," he answered, frankly.
+
+She nodded.
+
+"I have never been in London at all," she continued. "I really only know
+what men and women are like from books, or the one or two types I have
+met around here. Now, do you think that that is enough to satisfy one? Of
+course it is very beautiful here, I know, and sometimes when the sun is
+shining and the birds singing and the sea comes up into the creeks,
+well, one almost feels content. But the sun doesn't always shine,
+Richard, and there are times when I am right down bored, and I feel as
+though I'd love to draw my allowance from uncle, pack my trunk, and go up
+to London, on my own!"
+
+He laughed. Somehow all that she had said had sounded so natural that
+some part of his uneasiness was already passing away.
+
+"Yours," he admitted, "is an extreme case. I really don't know why your
+uncle has never taken you up for a month or so in the season."
+
+"We have lived here for four years," she said, "and he has never once
+suggested it. He goes himself, of course, sometimes, but I am quite sure
+that he doesn't enjoy it. For days before he fidgets about and looks
+perfectly miserable, and when he comes back he always goes off for a long
+walk by himself. I am perfectly certain that for some reason or other
+he hates going. Yet he seems to have been everywhere, to know every one.
+To hear him talk with Mrs. Handsell is like a new Arabian Nights to me."
+
+He nodded.
+
+"Your uncle was a very distinguished man," he said. "I was only at
+college then, but I remember what a fuss there was in all the papers when
+he resigned his seat."
+
+"What did they say was the reason?" she asked, eagerly.
+
+"A slight disagreement with Lord Rochester, and ill-health."
+
+"Absurd!" she exclaimed. "Uncle is as strong as a horse."
+
+"Would you like him," he asked, "to go back into political life?"
+
+Her eyes sparkled.
+
+"Of course I should."
+
+"You may have your wish," he said, a little sadly. "I don't fancy he has
+been quite the same man since Sir Leslie Borrowdean was here, and Mrs.
+Handsell never leaves him alone for a moment."
+
+She laughed.
+
+"You talk as though they were conspirators!" she exclaimed.
+
+"That is precisely what I believe them to be," he answered, grimly.
+
+"Richard!"
+
+"Can't help it," he declared. "I will tell you something that I have no
+right to tell you. Mrs. Handsell is not your friend's real name."
+
+"Richard, how exciting!" she exclaimed. "Do tell me how you know."
+
+"Her solicitors told mine so when she took the farm."
+
+"Not her real name? But--I wonder they let it to her."
+
+"Oh, her references were all right," he answered. "My people saw to that.
+I do not mean to insinuate for a moment that she had any improper reasons
+for calling herself Mrs. Handsell, or anything else she liked. The
+explanations given were quite satisfactory. But she has become very
+friendly with you and with your uncle, and I think that she ought to have
+told you both about it."
+
+"Do you know her real name?"
+
+"No! It is not my affair. My solicitors knew, and they were satisfied.
+Perhaps I ought not to have told you this, but--"
+
+"Hush!" she said. "They are coming out. If you like you can take me down
+to the orchard wall, and we will watch the tide come in--"
+
+Mannering came out alone and looked around. The full moon was creeping
+into the sky. The breath of wind which shook the leaves of the tall elm
+trees that shut in his little demesne from the village, was soft, and,
+for the time of year, wonderfully mild. Below, through the orchard trees,
+were faint visions of the marshland, riven with creeks of silvery sea. He
+turned back towards the room, where red-shaded lamps still stood upon the
+white tablecloth, a curiously artificial daub of color after the
+splendour of the moonlit land.
+
+"The night is perfect," he exclaimed. "Do you need a wrap, or are you
+sufficiently acclimatized?"
+
+She came out to him, tall and slender in her black dinner gown, the
+figure of a girl, the pale, passionate face of a woman, to whom every
+moment of life had its own special and individual meaning. Her eyes were
+strangely bright. There was a tenseness about her manner, a restraint in
+her tone, which seemed to speak of some emotional crisis. She passed out
+into the quiet garden, in itself so exquisitely in accordance with this
+sleeping land, and even Mannering was at once conscious of some alien
+note in these old-world surroundings which had long ago soothed his
+ruffled nerves into the luxury of repose.
+
+"A wrap!" she murmured. "How absurd! Come and let us sit under the cedar
+tree. Those young people seem to have wandered off, and I want to talk to
+you."
+
+"I am content to listen," he answered. "It is a night for listeners,
+this!"
+
+"I want to talk," she continued, "and yet--the words seem difficult.
+These wonderful days! How quickly they seem to have passed."
+
+"There are others to follow," he answered, smiling. "That is one of the
+joys of life here. One can count on things!"
+
+"Others for you!" she murmured. "You have pitched your tent. I came here
+only as a wanderer."
+
+"But scarcely a month ago," he exclaimed, "you too--"
+
+"Don't!" she interrupted. "A month ago it seemed to me possible that
+I might live here always. I felt myself growing young again. I believed
+that I had severed all the ties which bound me to the days which have
+gone before. I was wrong. It was the sort of folly which comes to one
+sometimes, the sort of folly for which one pays."
+
+His face was almost white in the moonlight. His deep-set grey eyes were
+fixed upon her.
+
+"You were content--a month ago," he said. "You have been in London for
+two days, and you have come back a changed woman. Why must you think of
+leaving this place? Why need you go at all?"
+
+"My friend," she said, softly, "I think that you know why. It is very
+beautiful here, and I have never been happier in all my life. But one may
+not linger all one's days in the pleasant places. One sleeps through the
+nights and is rested, but the days--ah, they are different."
+
+"I cannot reason with you," he said. "You are too vague. Yet--you say
+that you have been contented here."
+
+"I have been happy," she murmured.
+
+"Then you must speak more plainly," he insisted, a note of passion
+throbbing in his hoarse tones. "I ask you again--why do you talk of going
+back, like a city slave whose days of holiday are over? What is there in
+the world more beautiful than the gifts the gods shower on us here? We
+have the sun, and the sea, and the wind by day and by night--this! It is
+the flower garden of life. Stay and pluck the roses with me."
+
+"Ah, my friend," she murmured, "if that were possible!"
+
+She sank down into the seat under the cedar tree. Her hands were clasped
+nervously together, her head was downcast.
+
+"Your words," she continued, her voice sinking almost to a whisper, yet
+lacking nothing in distinctness, "are like wine. They mount to the head,
+they intoxicate, they tempt! And yet all the time one knows that it is
+not possible. Surely you yourself--in your heart--must know it!"
+
+"Not I!" he answered, fiercely. "The world would have claimed me if
+it could, but I laughed at it. Our destinies are our own. With our own
+fingers we mould and shape them."
+
+"There is the little voice," she said, "the little voice, which rings
+even through our dreams. Life--actual, militant life, I mean--may have
+its vulgarities, its weariness and its disappointments, but it is, after
+all, the only place for men and women. The battle may be sordid, and the
+prizes tinsel--yet it is only the cowards who linger without."
+
+"Then let you and me be cowards," he answered. "We shall at least be
+happy."
+
+She shook her head a little sadly.
+
+"I doubt it," she answered. "Happiness is a gift, not a prize. It comes
+seldom enough to those who seek it."
+
+He laughed scornfully.
+
+"I am not a seeker," he cried. "I possess. It seems to me that all the
+beautiful things of life are here to-night. Listen! Do you hear the sea,
+the full tide sweeping softly up into the land, a long drawn out
+undernote of breathless harmonies, the rustling of leaves there in the
+elm trees, the faint night wind, like the murmuring of angels? Lift your
+head! Was there anything ever sweeter than the perfume from that hedge of
+honeysuckle? What can a man want more than these things--and--"
+
+"Go on!"
+
+"And the woman he loves! There, I have said it. Useless words enough! You
+know very well that I love you. I meant to have said nothing just yet,
+but who could help it--on such a night as this! Don't talk of going away,
+Berenice. I want you here always."
+
+She held herself away from him. Her face was deathly white now. Her eyes
+questioned him fiercely.
+
+"Before I answer you. You were in London last week?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Why?"
+
+"I had business."
+
+"In Chelsea, in Merton Street?"
+
+He gave a little gasp.
+
+"What do you know about that?" he asked, almost roughly.
+
+"You were seen there, not for the first time. The person whom you
+visited--I have heard about. She is somewhat notorious, is she not?"
+
+He was very quiet, pale to the lips. A strange, hunted expression had
+crept into his eyes.
+
+"I want to know what took you there. Am I asking too much? Remember that
+you have asked me a good deal."
+
+"Has Borrowdean anything to do with this?" he demanded.
+
+"I have known Sir Leslie Borrowdean for many years," she answered, "and
+it is quite true that we have discussed certain matters--concerning you."
+
+"You have known Sir Leslie Borrowdean for many years," he repeated. "Yet
+you met here as strangers."
+
+"Sir Leslie divined my wishes," she answered. "He knew that it was my
+wish to spend several months away from everybody, and, if possible,
+unrecognized. Perhaps I had better make my confession at once. My name
+is not Mrs. Handsell. I am the Duchess of Lenchester."
+
+Mannering stood as though turned to stone. The woman watched him eagerly.
+She waited for him to speak--in vain. A sudden mist of tears blinded her.
+She closed her eyes. When she opened them Mannering was gone.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V
+
+THE HESITATION OF MR. MANNERING
+
+
+The peculiar atmosphere of the room, heavy with the newest perfume from
+the Burlington Arcade, and the scent of exotic flowers, at no time
+pleasing to him, seemed more than usually oppressive to Mannering as he
+fidgetted about waiting for the woman whom he had come to see. He was
+conscious of a restless longing to open wide the windows, take the
+flowers from their vases, throw them into the street, and poke out the
+fire. The little room, with all its associations, its almost pathetic
+attempts at refinement, its furniture which reeked of the Tottenham Court
+Road, was suddenly hateful to him. He detested his presence there, and
+its object. He was already in a state of nervous displeasure when the
+door opened.
+
+The girl who entered seemed in a sense as ill in accord with such
+surroundings as himself. She was plainly dressed in black, her hair
+brushed back, her complexion pale, her eyes brilliant with a not
+altogether natural light. She regarded him with a curious mixture of fear
+and welcome. The latter, however, triumphed easily. She came towards him
+with out-stretched hand and a delightful smile.
+
+"You;--so soon again!" she exclaimed. "Were there--so many mistakes?"
+
+Mannering's face softened. He was half ashamed of his irritation. He
+answered her kindly.
+
+"Scarcely any, Hester," he answered. "Your typing is always excellent."
+
+Her anxiety was only half allayed.
+
+"There is nothing else wrong?" she demanded, breathlessly.
+
+"Nothing whatever," he assured her. "Where is your mother?"
+
+She sat down. The light died out of her face.
+
+"Out!" she answered. "Gone to Brighton for the day. What do you want with
+her?"
+
+"Nothing," he answered, gravely. "I only wanted to know whether we were
+likely to be interrupted."
+
+"She will not be in for some time," the girl answered. "She is almost
+certain to stay down there and dine."
+
+He nodded.
+
+"Hester," he asked, "do you know any one--a man named Borrowdean? Sir
+Leslie Borrowdean?"
+
+She shook her head a little doubtfully.
+
+"I have heard mother speak of him," she said.
+
+"He is a friend of hers, then?"
+
+"She met him at a supper party at the Savoy a few weeks ago," she
+answered.
+
+"And since?"
+
+"I believe so! She talks about him a great deal. Why do you ask me this?"
+
+"I cannot tell you, Hester," he said, gravely. "By the bye, do you think
+that she is likely to have mentioned my name to him?"
+
+The girl flushed up to her eyebrows.
+
+"I--I don't know! I am sorry," she faltered. "You know what mother is. If
+any one asked her questions she would be more than likely to answer them.
+I do hope that she has not been making mischief."
+
+He left her anxiety unrelieved. For some few moments he did not speak
+at all. Already he fancied that he could see the whole pitiful little
+incident--Borrowdean, diplomatic, genial, persistent, the woman a fool,
+fashioned to his own making; himself the sacrifice. Yet the meaning of it
+all was dark to him.
+
+She moved over to his side. Her eyes and tone were full of appeal. She
+sat close to him, her long white fingers nervously interlocked.
+
+"I am afraid of you. More afraid than ever to-day," she murmured. "You
+look stern, and I don't understand why you have come."
+
+"To see you, Hester," he answered, with a sudden impulse of kindness.
+
+"Ah, no!" she interrupted, choking back a little sob. "We both know so
+well that it is not that. It is pity which brings you, pity and nothing
+else. You know very well what a difference it makes to me. If I have your
+work to do, and a letter sometimes, and see you now and then, I can bear
+everything. But it is not easy. It is never easy!"
+
+"Of course it is not," he assented. "Hester, have you thought over what I
+said to you last time I was here?"
+
+She shook her head.
+
+"What is the use of thinking?" she asked, quietly. "I could not leave
+her."
+
+"You mean that she would not let you go?" Mannering asked.
+
+"No! It is not that," the girl answered. "Sometimes I think that she
+would be glad. It is not that."
+
+He nodded gravely.
+
+"I understand. But--"
+
+"If you understand, please do not say any more."
+
+"But I must, Hester," he persisted. "There is no one else to give you
+advice. I know all that you can tell me, and I say that this is no
+fitting home for you. Your mother's friends are not fit friends for you.
+She has chosen her way in life, and she will not brook any interference.
+You can do no good by remaining with her. On the contrary, you are doing
+yourself a great deal of harm. I am old enough to be your father, child.
+Wise enough, I hope, to be your adviser. You shall be my secretary, and
+come and live at Blakely."
+
+A faint flush stole into her anæmic. One realized then that under
+different conditions she might have been pretty. Her face was no longer
+expressionless.
+
+"You are so kind," she said, softly. "I shall always like to think of
+this. And yet--it is impossible."
+
+"Why?"
+
+She hesitated.
+
+"It is difficult to explain," she said. "But my being here makes a
+difference. I found it out once when I went away for a week. Some of--of
+mother's friends came to the house then whom she will not have when I am
+here. If I were away altogether--oh, I can't explain, but I would not
+dare to go."
+
+Mannering seemed to have much to say--and said nothing. This queer,
+pale-faced girl, with her earnest eyes and few simple words, had silenced
+him. She was right--right at least from her own point of view. A certain
+sense of shame suddenly oppressed him. He was acutely conscious of his
+only half-admitted reason for this visit. He had argued for himself. It
+was his own passionate desire to free himself from associations that were
+little short of loathsome which had prompted this visit. And then what he
+had dreaded most of all happened. As they sat facing one another in the
+silent, half-darkened room, Mannering trying to bring himself into accord
+with half-admitted but repugnant convictions, she watching him
+hopelessly, the tinkle of a hansom bell sounded outside. The sudden
+stopping of a horse, the rattle of a latchkey, and she was in the room.
+Mannering rose to his feet with a little exclamation.
+
+The woman stood and looked in upon them. She wore a pink cloth gown, a
+flower-garlanded hat, a white coaching veil, beneath which her features
+were indistinguishable. She brought with her a waft of strong perfume.
+Her figure was a living suggestion of the struggle between maturity and
+the corsetiére. Before she spoke she laughed--not altogether pleasantly.
+
+"You here again!" she exclaimed to Mannering. "Upon my word! I'm not a
+ghost! Hester, go and see about some tea, and a brandy and soda. Billy
+Foa brought me up on his motor, and I'm half choked with dust."
+
+The girl rose obediently and quitted the room. The woman untwisted her
+veil, drew out the pins from her hat, and threw both upon the sofa. Then
+she turned suddenly upon Mannering.
+
+"Look here," she said, "the last twice you've been here you seem to have
+carefully chosen times when I am out. I don't understand it. It can't be
+that you want to see that chit of a girl of mine. Why don't you come when
+I ask you? Why do you act as though I were something to be avoided?"
+
+Mannering rose to his feet.
+
+"I came to-day without knowing where you were," he answered, "but I will
+admit that I wished to see Hester."
+
+"What for?"
+
+"I have asked her to come and live at Blakely with my niece and myself.
+She is an excellent typist, and I require a secretary."
+
+The woman looked at him angrily. Without her veil she displayed features
+not in themselves unattractive, but a complexion somewhat impaired by the
+use of cosmetics. The powder upon her cheeks was even then visible.
+
+"What about me?" she asked, sharply.
+
+Mannering looked her steadily in the face.
+
+"I do not think," he said, "that such a life would suit you."
+
+She was an angry woman, and she did not become angry gracefully.
+
+"You mean that I'm not good enough for you and your friends in the
+country. That's what you mean, isn't it? And I should like to know, if
+I'm not, whose fault it is. Tell me that, will you?"
+
+Mannering flinched, though almost imperceptibly.
+
+"I meant simply what I said," he said. "Blakely would not suit you at
+all. We have few friends there, and our simple life would not attract you
+in the slightest. With Hester it is different. She would have her work,
+in which she takes some interest, and I believe the change would be in
+every way good for her."
+
+"Well, she shan't come," the woman said, throwing herself into a chair,
+and regarding him insolently. "I'm not going to live all alone--and be
+talked about. Don't stare at me like that, Lawrence. I'm the child's
+mother, am I not?"
+
+"It is because you are her mother," he said, quietly, "that I thought you
+might be glad to find a suitable home for her."
+
+"What's good enough for me ought to be good enough for her," she
+answered, doggedly.
+
+Mannering was silent for a moment. This woman seemed to belong to a
+different world from that with whose denizens he was in any way familiar.
+Years of isolation, and a certain epicureanism of taste, from which
+necessity had never taken the fine edge, had made him a little
+intolerant. He could see nothing that was not absolutely repulsive in
+this woman, whose fine eyes were seeking even now to attract his
+admiration. She was making the best of herself. She had chosen the
+darkest corner of the room, and her pose was not ungraceful. Her skirts
+were skilfully raised to show just as much as possible of her long,
+slender foot, with the patent shoes and silver buckles. She knew that her
+ankles were above reproach, and her dress becoming. A dozen men had paid
+her compliments during the day, yet she knew that every admiring glance,
+every whispered word which had come to her to-day, or for many days past,
+would count for nothing if only she could pierce for a single moment the
+unchanging coldness of the man who sat watching her now with the face of
+a Sphynx. A slow tide of passion welled up in her heart. Was not he a man
+and free, and was not she a woman? It was not much she asked from him, no
+pledge, no bondage. His kindness only, she told herself, was all she
+craved. She wanted him to look at her as other men looked at her. Who was
+he that he should set himself on a pedestal? Perhaps he had grown shy
+from the rust of his country life, the slow drifting apart from the world
+of men and women. Perhaps--she rose swiftly to her feet and crossed the
+room.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI
+
+SACRIFICE
+
+
+She leaned over him, one hand on the back of his chair, the other seeking
+in vain for his.
+
+"Lawrence," she said, "you grow colder and more unkind every day. What
+have I done to change you so? I am a foolish woman, I know, but there are
+things which I cannot forget."
+
+He rose at once to his feet, and stood apart from her.
+
+"I thought," he said, "I believed that we understood one another."
+
+She laughed softly.
+
+"I am very sure that I do not understand you," she said. "And as for
+you--I do not believe that you have ever understood any woman. There was
+a time, Lawrence--"
+
+His impassivity was gone. He threw out his hands.
+
+"Remember," he said, "there is a promise between us. Don't break it.
+Don't dare to break it!"
+
+She looked at him curiously. A new idea concerning this man and his
+avoidance of her crept into her mind. It was at least consoling to her
+vanity, and it left her a chance. She had roused him too, at last, and
+that was worth something.
+
+"Why not?" she asked, moving a step towards him. "It was a foolish
+promise. It has done neither of us any good. It has spoilt a part of my
+life. Why should I keep silence, and let it go on to the end? Do you know
+what it has made of me, this promise?"
+
+He shrank back.
+
+"Don't! I have done all I could!"
+
+"All you could!" she repeated, scornfully. "You drew a diagram of your
+duty, and you have moved like a machine along the lines. You talk like a
+Pharisee, Lawrence! Come! You knew me years ago! Do you find me changed?
+Tell me the truth."
+
+"Yes," he admitted, "you are changed."
+
+She nodded.
+
+"You admit that. Perhaps, perhaps," she continued more slowly, "there are
+things about me now of which you don't approve. My friends are a little
+fast, I go out alone, I daresay people have said things. There, you see
+I am very frank. I mean to be! I mean you to know that whatever I am, the
+fault is yours."
+
+"You are as God or the Devil made you," he answered, hardly. "You are
+what you would have become, in any case."
+
+"Lawrence!"
+
+Already he hated the memory of his words. True or not, they were spoken
+to a woman who was cowering under them as under a lash. He was at a
+disadvantage now. If she had met him with anger they might have cried
+quits. But he had seen her wince, seen her sudden pallor, and it was not
+a pleasant sight.
+
+"Forgive me," he said. "I do not know quite what I am saying. You have
+broken a compact which I had hoped might have lasted all our days. Let us
+be better friends, if you will, but let us keep that promise which we
+made to one another."
+
+"It was so many years ago," she said, in a low tone. "I am afraid to
+think how many. It makes me lonely, Lawrence, to look ahead. I am afraid
+of growing old!"
+
+He looked at her steadily. Yes, the signs were there. She was a
+good-looking woman to-day, a handsome woman in some lights, but she had
+reached the limit. It was a matter of a few years at most, and then--He
+stood with his hands behind his back.
+
+"It is a fear which we must all share," he said, quietly. "The only
+antidote is work."
+
+"Work!" she repeated, scornfully. "That is the man's resource. What about
+us? What about me?"
+
+"It is no matter of sex," he declared. "We all make our own choice. We
+are what we make of ourselves."
+
+"It is not true," she answered, bluntly. "Not with us, at any rate. We
+are what our menkind make of us. Oh, what cowards you all are."
+
+"Cowards?"
+
+"Yes. You do what mischief you choose, and then soothe your conscience
+with platitudes. You will take hold of pleasure with both hands, but your
+shoulders are not broad enough for the pack of responsibility. Don't look
+at me as though I were a mile off, Lawrence, as though this were simply
+an impersonal discussion. I am speaking to you--of you. You avoid me
+whenever you can. I don't often get a chance of speaking to you. You
+shall listen now. You live the life of a poet and a scholar, they tell
+me. You live in a beautiful home, you take care that nothing ugly or
+disturbing shall come near you. You are pleased with it, aren't you? You
+think yourself better than other men. Well, you are making a big mistake.
+A man doesn't have to answer for his own life only. He has to carry the
+burden of the lives his influence has wrecked and spoilt. I know just
+what you think of me. I am a middle-aged woman, clinging to my youth and
+pleasures--the sort of pleasures for which you have a vast contempt.
+There isn't an hour of my days of which you wouldn't disapprove. I'm not
+your sort of woman at all. And yet I was all right once, Lawrence, and
+what I am now--" she paused, "what I am now--"
+
+Hester came in, followed by a maid with the tea-tray. She looked from
+one to the other a little anxiously. The atmosphere of the room seemed
+charged with electricity. Mannering's face was grey. Her mother was
+nervously crumpling into a ball her tiny lace handkerchief. Mrs.
+Phillimore rose abruptly from her seat.
+
+"Have you got the brandy and soda, Hester?" she asked.
+
+"I'm afraid I forgot it, mother," the girl answered. "Mayn't I make you
+some Russian tea? I've had the lemon sliced."
+
+The woman laughed, a little unnaturally.
+
+"What a dutiful daughter," she exclaimed. "That's right! I want looking
+after, don't I? I'll have the tea, Hester, but send it up to my room. I'm
+going to lie down. That wretched motoring has given me a headache, and
+I'm dining out to-night. Good-bye, Mr. Mannering, if I don't see you
+again."
+
+She nodded, without glancing in his direction, and left the room. The
+maid arranged the tea-tray and departed. Hester showed no signs of being
+aware that anything unusual had happened. She made a little desultory
+conversation. Mannering answered in monosyllables.
+
+When at last he put his cup down he rose to go.
+
+"You are quite sure, Hester," he said. "You have made up your mind?"
+
+She, too, rose, and came over to him.
+
+"You know that I am right," she answered, quietly. "The life you offer me
+would be paradise, but I dare not even think of it. I may not do any good
+here, perhaps I don't, but I can't come away."
+
+"You are a true daughter of your sex," he said, smiling. "The keynote of
+your life must be sacrifice."
+
+"Perhaps we are not so unwise, after all," she answered, "for I think
+that there are more happy women in the world than men."
+
+"There are more, I think, who deserve to be, dear," he answered, holding
+her hand for a moment. "Good-bye!"
+
+Mannering walked in somewhat abstracted fashion to the corner of the
+street, and signalled for a hansom. With his foot upon the step he
+hesitated.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII
+
+THE DUCHESS'S "AT HOME"
+
+
+"The perfect man," the Duchess murmured, as she stirred her tea, "does
+not exist. I know a dozen perfect women, dear, dull creatures, and plenty
+of men who know how to cover up the flaw. But there is something in the
+composition of the male sex which keeps them always a little below the
+highest pinnacle."
+
+"It is purely a matter of concealment," her friend declared. "Women are
+cleverer humbugs than men."
+
+Borrowdean shrugged his shoulders.
+
+"I know your perfect woman!" he remarked, softly. "You search for her
+through the best years of your life, and when you have found her you
+avoid her. That," he added, handing his empty cup to a footman, "is why
+I am a bachelor."
+
+The Duchess regarded him complacently.
+
+"My dear Sir Leslie," she said, "I am afraid you will have to find a
+better reason for your miserable state. The perfect woman would certainly
+have nothing to do with you if you found her."
+
+"On the contrary," he declared, confidently, "I am convinced that she
+would find me attractive."
+
+The Duchess shook her head.
+
+"Your theory," she declared, "is antiquated. Like and unlike do not
+attract. We seek in others the qualities which we strive most zealously
+to develop in ourselves. I know a case in point."
+
+"Good!" Sir Leslie remarked. "I like examples. The logic of them appeals
+to me."
+
+The Duchess half closed her eyes. For a moment she was silent. She seemed
+to be listening to something a long way off. Through the open windows of
+her softly shaded drawing-rooms, odourous with flowers, came the rippling
+of water falling from a fountain in the conservatory, the lazy hum of a
+mowing machine on the lawn, the distant tinkling of a hansom bell in the
+Square. But these were not the sounds which for a moment had changed her
+face.
+
+"I myself," she murmured, "am an example!"
+
+A woman who had risen to go sat down again.
+
+"Do go on, Duchess!" she exclaimed. "Anything in the nature of a personal
+confession is so fascinating, and you know you are such an enigma to all
+of us."
+
+"Am I?" she answered, smiling. "Then I am likely to remain so."
+
+"A perfectly obvious person like myself," the woman remarked, "is always
+fascinated by the unusual. But if you are really not going to give
+yourself away, Duchess, I am afraid I must move on. One hates to leave
+your beautifully cool rooms. Shall I see you to-night, I wonder, at
+Esholt House?"
+
+"Perhaps!"
+
+There were still many people in the room. Some fresh arrivals occupied
+his hostess's attention, and Borrowdean, with a resigned shrug of the
+shoulders, prepared to depart. He had come, hoping for an opportunity to
+be alone for a few minutes with the Duchess, and himself a skilful
+tactician in such small matters, he could not but admire the way she had
+kept him at arm's length. And then the opportunity for a master stroke
+came. A servant sought him out with a card. A man of method, he seldom
+left his rooms without instructions as to where he was to be found.
+
+"The gentleman begged you to excuse his coming here, sir," the man
+whispered, confidentially, "but he is returning to the country this
+evening, and was anxious to see you. He is quite ready to wait your
+convenience."
+
+Borrowdean held the card in his hand, scrutinizing it with impassive
+face. Was this a piece of unparalleled good fortune, or simply a trick of
+the fates to tempt him on to catastrophe? With that wonderful swiftness
+of thought which was part of his mental equipment he balanced the
+chances--and took his risk.
+
+"I should be glad," he said, looking the servant in the face, "if you
+would show the gentleman up here as an ordinary visitor. I should like to
+find you down stairs when I come out. You understand?"
+
+"Perfectly, sir," the man answered, and withdrew.
+
+Mannering had no idea whose house he was in. The address Borrowdean's
+servant had given him had been simply 81, Grosvenor Square. Nevertheless,
+he was conscious of a little annoyance as he followed the servant up the
+broad stairs. He would much have preferred waiting until Borrowdean had
+concluded his call. He remembered his grey travelling clothes, and all
+his natural distaste for social amenities returned with unabated force as
+he neared the reception-rooms and heard the softly modulated rise and
+fall of feminine voices, the swishing of silks and muslin, the faint
+perfume of flowers and scents which seemed to fill the air. At the last
+moment he would have withdrawn, but his guide seemed deaf. His words
+passed unheeded. His name, very softly but very distinctly, had been
+announced. He had no option but to pass into the room and play the cards
+which fate and his friend had dealt him.
+
+Borrowdean rose to greet his friend. Mannering, not knowing who his
+hostess might be, and feeling absolutely no curiosity concerning her,
+confined his attention wholly to the man whom he had come to seek.
+
+"I did not wish to disturb you here, Borrowdean," he said, quickly, "but
+if your call is over, could you come away for a few minutes? I have a
+matter to discuss with you."
+
+Borrowdean smiled slightly, and laid his hand upon the other's shoulder.
+
+"By all means, Mannering," he answered. "But since you have discovered
+our little secret, don't you think that you had better speak to our
+hostess?"
+
+Mannering was puzzled, but his eyes followed Borrowdean's slight gesture.
+Berenice, who at the sound of his voice had suddenly abandoned her
+conversation and risen to her feet, was within a few feet of him. A
+sudden light swept into Mannering's face.
+
+"You!" he exclaimed softly.
+
+Her hands went out towards him. Borrowdean, with an almost imperceptible
+movement, checked his advance.
+
+"So you see we are found out, after all, Duchess," he said, turning to
+her. "You have known Mrs. Handsell, Mannering, let me present you now to
+her other self. Duchess, you see that our recluse has come to his senses
+at last. I must really introduce you formally: Mr. Mannering--the Duchess
+of Lenchester."
+
+Berenice, arrested in her forward movement, watched Mannering's face
+eagerly. So carefully modulated had been Borrowdean's voice that no word
+of his had reached beyond their own immediate circle. It was as though a
+silent tableau were being played out between the three, and Mannering, to
+whom repression had become a habit, gave little indication of anything he
+might have felt. Borrowdean's fixed smile betokened nothing but an
+ordinary interest in the introduction of two friends, and the Duchess's
+back was turned towards her friends. They both waited for Mannering to
+speak.
+
+"This," he said, slowly, "is a surprise! I had no idea when I called to
+see Borrowdean here, of the pleasure which was in store for me."
+
+Borrowdean dropped his eyeglass.
+
+"Are you serious, my dear Mannering?" he exclaimed. "Do you mean to say
+that you came here--"
+
+"Only to see you," Mannering interrupted. "That you should know perfectly
+well. I am sorry to hurry you out, but the few minutes' conversation
+which I desired with you is of some importance, and my train leaves in
+an hour. I hope that you will pardon me," he added, looking steadily at
+Berenice, "if I hurry away one of your guests."
+
+She laughed quite in her natural manner.
+
+"I will forgive anything," she said, "except that you should hurry away
+yourself so unceremoniously. Come and sit down near me. I want to talk to
+you about Blakeley."
+
+She swept her gown on one side, disclosing a vacant place on the settee
+where she had been sitting. For a second her eyes said more to him than
+her courteous but half-careless words of invitation. Mannering made no
+movement forward.
+
+"I am sorry," he said, "but it is impossible for me to stay!"
+
+She seemed to dismiss him and the whole subject with a careless little
+shrug of the shoulders, which was all the farewell she vouchsafed to
+either of them. A woman who had just entered seemed to absorb her whole
+attention. The two men passed out.
+
+Mannering spoke no word until they stood upon the pavement. Then he
+turned almost savagely upon his companion.
+
+"This is a trick of yours, I suppose!" he exclaimed. "Damn you and your
+meddling, Borrowdean. Why can't you leave me and my affairs alone? No,
+I am not going your way. Let us separate here!"
+
+Borrowdean shook his head.
+
+"You are unreasonable, Mannering," he said. "I have done only what I
+believe you were on your way to ask me to do. I have brought you and
+Berenice together again. It was for both your sakes. If there has been
+any misunderstanding between you, it would be better cleared up."
+
+Mannering gripped his arm.
+
+"Let us go to your rooms, Borrowdean," he said. "It is time we understood
+one another."
+
+"Willingly!" Borrowdean said. "But your train?"
+
+"Let my train go," Mannering answered. "There are some things I have to
+say to you."
+
+Borrowdean called a hansom. The two men drove off together.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII
+
+THE MANNERING MYSTERY
+
+
+Borrowdean was curter than usual, even abrupt. The calm geniality of his
+manner had departed. He spoke in short, terse sentences, and he had the
+air of a man struggling to subdue a fit of perfectly reasonable and
+justifiable anger. It was a carefully cultivated pose. He even refrained
+from his customary cigarette.
+
+"Look here, Mannering," he said, "there are times when a few plain words
+are worth an hour's conversation. Will you have them from me?"
+
+"Yes!"
+
+"This thing was started six months ago, soon after those two
+bye-elections in Yorkshire. Even the most despondent of us then saw that
+the Government could scarcely last its time. We had a meeting and we
+attempted to form on paper a trial cabinet. You know our weakness. We
+have to try to form a National party out of a number of men who, although
+they call themselves broadly Liberals, are as far apart as the very poles
+of thought. It was as much as they could do to sit in the same room
+together. From the opening of the meeting until its close, there was but
+one subject upon which every one was unanimous. That was the absolute
+necessity of getting you to come back to our aid."
+
+"You flatter me," Mannering said, with fine irony.
+
+"You yourself," Borrowdean continued, without heeding the interruption,
+"encouraged us. From the first pronouncement of this wonderful new policy
+you sprang into the arena. We were none of us ready. You were! It is true
+that your weapon was the pen, but you reached a great public. The country
+to-day considers you the champion of Free Trade."
+
+"Pass on," Mannering interrupted, brusquely. "All this is wasted time!"
+
+"A smaller meeting," Borrowdean continued, "was held with a view of
+discussing the means whereby you could be persuaded to rejoin us. At that
+meeting the Duchess of Lenchester was present."
+
+Mannering, who had been pacing the room, stopped short. He grasped the
+back of a chair, and turning round faced Borrowdean.
+
+"Well?"
+
+"You know what place the Duchess has held in the councils of our party
+since the Duke's death," Borrowdean continued. "She has the political
+instinct. If she were a man she would be a leader. All the great ladies
+are on the other side, but the Duchess is more than equal to them all.
+She entertains magnificently, and with tact. She never makes a mistake.
+She is part and parcel of the Liberal Party. It was she who volunteered
+to make the first effort to bring you back."
+
+Mannering turned his head. Apparently he was looking out of the window.
+
+"Her methods," Borrowdean continued, "did not commend themselves to us,
+but beggars must not be choosers. Besides, the Duchess was in love with
+her own scheme. Such objections as we made were at once overruled."
+
+He paused, but Mannering said nothing. He was still looking out of the
+window, though his eyes saw nothing of the street below, or the great
+club buildings opposite. A scent of roses, lost now and then in the
+salter fragrance of the night breeze sweeping over the marshes, the magic
+of a wonderful, white-clad presence, the low words, the sense of a world
+apart, a world of speechless beauty.... What empty dreams! A palace built
+in a poet's fancy upon a quicksand.
+
+"The Duchess," Borrowdean continued, "undertook to discover from you what
+prospects there were, if any, of your return to political life. She took
+none of us into her confidence. We none of us knew what means she meant
+to employ. She disappeared. She communicated with none of us. We none of
+us had the least idea what had become of her. Time went on, and we began
+to get a little uneasy. We had a meeting and it was arranged that I
+should come down and see you. I came, I saw you, I saw the Duchess! The
+situation very soon became clear to me. Instead of the Duchess converting
+you, you had very nearly converted the Duchess."
+
+"I can assure you--" Mannering began.
+
+"Let me finish," Borrowdean pleaded. "I realized the situation at a
+glance. Your attitude I was not so much surprised at, but the attitude of
+the Duchess, I must confess, amazed me. I came to the conclusion that I
+had found my way into a forgotten corner of the world, where the lotos
+flowers still blossomed, and the sooner I was out of it the better. Now I
+think that brings us, Mannering, up to the present time."
+
+Mannering turned from the window, out of which he had been steadfastly
+gazing. There was a strained look under his eyes, and little trace of the
+tan upon his, cheeks. He had the air of a jaded and a weary man.
+
+"That is all, then," he remarked. "I can still catch my train."
+
+Borrowdean held out his hand.
+
+"No," he said. "It is not all. This explanation I have made for your
+sake, Mannering, and it has been a truthful and full one. Now it is my
+turn. I have a few words to say to you on my own account."
+
+Mannering paused. There was a note of something unusual in Borrowdean's
+voice, a portent of things behind. Mannering involuntarily straightened
+himself. Something was awakened in him which had lain dormant for many
+years--dormant since those old days of battle, of swift attack, of
+ambushed defence and the clamour of brilliant tongues. Some of the old
+light flashed in his eyes.
+
+"Say it then--quickly!"
+
+"We speak of great things," Borrowdean continued, "and the catching of a
+train is a trifle. My wardrobe and house are at your service. Don't hurry
+me!"
+
+Mannering smiled.
+
+"Go on!" he said.
+
+"The men who count in this world," Borrowdean declared, calmly lighting
+a cigarette, "are either thinkers of great thoughts or doers of great
+deeds. To the former belong the poets and the sentimentalists; to the
+latter the statesmen and the soldiers."
+
+"What have I done," Mannering murmured, "that I should be sent back to
+kindergarten? Platitudes such as this bore me. Let me catch my train."
+
+"In a moment. To all my arguments and appeals, to all my entreaties to
+you to realize yourself, to do your duty to us, to history and to
+posterity, you have replied in one manner only. You have spoken from the
+mushroom pedestal of the sentimentalist. Not a single word that has
+fallen from your lips has rung true. You have spoken as though your eyes
+were blind all the time to the letters of fire which truth has spelled
+out before you. Any further argument with you is useless, because you are
+not honest. You conceal your true position, and you adopt a false
+defence. Therefore, I relinquish my task. You can go and grow your roses,
+and think your poetry, and call it life if you will. But before you go I
+should like you to know that I, at least, am not deceived. I do not
+believe in you, Mannering. I ask you a question, and I challenge you to
+answer it. What is your true reason for making a scrap-heap of your
+career?"
+
+"Are you my friend," Mannering asked, quietly, "that you wish to pry
+behind the curtain of my life? If I have other reasons they concern
+myself alone."
+
+Borrowdean shook his head. He had scored, but he took care to show no
+sign of triumph.
+
+"The issue is too great," he said, "to be tried by the ordinary rules
+which govern social life. Will you presume that I am your friend, and let
+us consider the whole matter afresh together?"
+
+"I will not," Mannering answered. "But I will do this. I will answer your
+question. There is another reason which makes my reappearance in public
+life impossible. Not even your subtlety, Borrowdean, could remove it. I
+do not even wish it removed. I mean to live my own life, and not to be
+pitchforked back into politics to suit the convenience of a few
+adventurous office-seekers, and the Duchess of Lenchester!"
+
+"Mannering!"
+
+But Mannering had gone.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Borrowdean felt that this was a trying day. After a battle with Mannering
+he was face to face with an angry woman, to whose presence an imperious
+little note had just summoned him. Berenice was dressed for a royal
+dinner party, and she had only a few minutes to spare. Nevertheless she
+contrived to make them very unpleasant ones for Borrowdean.
+
+"The affair was entirely an accident," he pleaded.
+
+"It was nothing of the sort," she answered, bluntly. "I know you too well
+for that. Your bringing him here without warning was an unwarrantable
+interference with my affairs."
+
+Borrowdean could hold his own with men, but Berenice in her own room,
+a wonderful little paradise of soft colourings and luxury so perfectly
+chosen that it was rather felt than seen; Berenice, in her marvellous
+gown, with the necklace upon her bosom and the tiara flashing in her dark
+hair, was an overwhelming opponent. Borrowdean was helpless. He could not
+understand the attack itself. He failed altogether to appreciate its
+tenour.
+
+"Forgive me," he protested, "but I did not know that you had any plans.
+All that you told us on your return from Blakely was that you had failed.
+So far as you were concerned the matter seemed to me to be over, and with
+it, I imagined, your interest in Mannering. I brought him here--"
+
+"Well?"
+
+"Because I wished him to know who you were. I wished him to understand
+the improbability of your ever again returning to Blakely."
+
+"You are telling the truth now, at any rate," she remarked, curtly, "or
+what sounds like the truth. Why did you trouble in the matter at all?
+Where I have failed you are not likely to succeed."
+
+Borrowdean smiled for the first time.
+
+"I have still some hopes of doing so," he admitted.
+
+The Duchess glanced at the little Louis Seize time-piece, and hesitated.
+
+"You had better abandon them," she said. "Lawrence Mannering may be
+wrong, or he may be right, but he believes in his choice. He has no
+ambition. You have no motive left to work upon."
+
+Borrowdean shook his head.
+
+"You are wrong, Duchess," he remarked, simply. "I never believed in
+Mannering's sentimentality. To-day, with his own lips, he has confessed
+to me that another, an unbroached reason, stands behind his refusal!"
+
+"And he never told me," the Duchess murmured, involuntarily.
+
+"Duchess," Borrowdean answered, with a faint, cynical parting of the
+lips, "there are matters which a man does not mention to the woman in
+whose high opinion he aims at holding an exalted place."
+
+There was a knock at the door. The Duchess's maid entered, carrying a
+long cloak of glimmering lace and satin.
+
+The Duchess nodded.
+
+"I come at once, Hortense," she said, in French. "Sir Leslie," she added,
+turning towards him, "you are making a great mistake, and I advise you to
+be careful. You are one of those who think ill of all men. Such men as
+Lawrence Mannering belong to a race of human beings of whom you know
+nothing. I listened to you once, and I was a fool. You could as soon
+teach me to believe that you were a saint, as that Mannering had anything
+in his past or present life of which he was ashamed. Now, Hortense."
+
+Borrowdean walked off, still smiling. How simple half the world was.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX
+
+THE PUMPING OF MRS. PHILLIMORE
+
+
+Hester sprang to her feet eagerly as she heard the front door close, and
+standing behind the curtain she watched the man, who was already upon the
+pavement looking up and down the street for a hansom. His erect,
+distinguished figure was perfectly familiar to her. It was Sir Leslie
+Borrowdean again.
+
+She resumed her seat in front of the typewriter, and touched the keys
+idly. In a few moments what she had been expecting happened. Her mother
+entered the room.
+
+Of her advent there were the usual notifications. An immense rustling
+of silken skirts, and an overwhelming odour of the latest Bond Street
+perfume. She flung herself into a chair, and regarded her daughter with
+a complacent smile.
+
+"That delightful man has been to see me again," she exclaimed. "I could
+scarcely believe it when Mary brought me his card. By the bye, where is
+Mary? I want her to try to take that stain out of my pink silk skirt. I
+shall have to wear it to-night."
+
+"I will ring for her directly," the girl answered. "So that was Sir
+Leslie Borrowdean, mother! Why did he come to see you again so soon?"
+
+"I haven't the least idea," Mrs. Phillimore announced, "but I thought
+it was very sweet of him. It seems all the more remarkable when one
+considers the sort of man he is. He's very ambitious, you know, and
+devoted to politics."
+
+"Where did you meet him first?" Hester asked.
+
+"It was at the Metropole at Bexhill," Mrs. Phillimore answered. "We
+motored down there one day, and Lena Roberts told me that she heard him
+inquiring who I was directly we came into the room. He joined our party
+at luncheon. Billy knew him slightly, so I made him go over and ask him."
+
+Hester nodded, and seemed to be absorbed in some trifling defect of one
+of the keys of her typewriter.
+
+"Does he still ask you many questions about Mr. Mannering, mother?" she
+asked, quietly.
+
+"About Mr. Mannering!" Mrs. Phillimore repeated, with raised eyebrows.
+"Why, he scarcely ever mentions his name."
+
+She took up a small mirror from the table by her side, and critically
+touched her hair.
+
+"About Mr. Mannering, indeed," she repeated. "Why do you ask me such a
+question?"
+
+The girl hesitated.
+
+"Do you really want to know, mother?" she asked.
+
+"Of course!"
+
+"When Mr. Mannering was here last," Hester said, "he asked me whether Sir
+Leslie Borrowdean was a friend of yours. I fancy that they are political
+acquaintances, but I don't think that they are on very good terms."
+
+Mrs. Phillimore laid down the mirror and yawned.
+
+"Well, there's nothing very strange about that," she declared. "Lawrence
+isn't the sort to get on with many people, especially since he went and
+buried himself in the country. How pale you are looking, child. Why don't
+you go and take a walk, instead of hammering away at that old typewriter?
+Any one would think that you had to do it for a living!"
+
+"I prefer to earn my own living," the girl answered, "and I am not in the
+least tired. Tell me, are you going to see Sir Leslie Borrowdean again,
+mother?"
+
+The woman on the couch smoothed her hair once more, with a smile of
+gratification.
+
+"Sir Leslie has asked me to join a small party of friends for dinner at
+the Carlton this evening," she announced. "Why on earth are you looking
+at me like that, child? You're always grumbling that my friends are a
+fast lot, and don't suit you. You can't say anything against Sir Leslie."
+
+The girl had risen to her feet. The trouble in her face was manifest.
+
+"Mother," she said, slowly, "I wish that you were not going. I wish that
+you would have nothing whatever to do with Sir Leslie Borrowdean."
+
+"Good Heavens!--and why not?" the woman exclaimed, suddenly sitting up.
+
+"I believe that he only asked you because he has an idea that you can
+tell him--something he wants to know about Mr. Mannering," the girl
+answered, steadily. "I don't think that you ought to go!"
+
+"Rubbish!" her mother answered, crossly. "I don't believe that he has
+such an idea in his head. As though he couldn't ask me for the sake of my
+company. And if he does ask me questions, I'm not obliged to answer them,
+am I? Do you think that I'm to be turned inside out like a schoolgirl?"
+
+"Sir Leslie is very clever, and he is very unscrupulous," the girl
+answered. "I wish you weren't going! I believe that he wants to find out
+things."
+
+Mrs. Phillimore frowned uneasily.
+
+"I'm not a fool!" she said. "He's welcome to all he can get to know
+through me. I don't know what you want to try to make me uncomfortable
+for, Hester, I'm sure. Sir Leslie has never betrayed the least curiosity
+about Mr. Mannering, and I don't believe that he's any such idea in his
+head. Upon my word I don't see why you should think it impossible that
+Sir Leslie should come here just for the sake of improving an
+acquaintance which he found pleasant. That's what he gave me to
+understand, and he put it very nicely too!"
+
+"I do not think that Sir Leslie is that sort of man, mother."
+
+"And I don't see how you know anything about it," was the sharp response.
+"Ring the bell, please. I want to speak to Mary about my skirt."
+
+"You mean to dine with him then, mother?" she asked, crossing the room
+towards the bell.
+
+"Of course! I've accepted. To-night and as often as he chooses to ask me.
+Now don't upset me, please. I want to look my best to-night, and if I get
+angry my hair goes all out of curl."
+
+The girl went back to her typewriter. She unfolded a sheet of copy, and
+placed it on the stand before her.
+
+"If you have made up your mind, mother, I suppose you will go," she said.
+"Still--I wish you wouldn't."
+
+Mrs. Phillimore shrugged her shoulders.
+
+"If I did what you wished all the time," she remarked, pettishly, "I
+might as well drown myself at once. Can't you understand, Hester?" she
+added, with a sudden change of manner, "that I must do something to help
+me to forget? You don't want to see me go mad, do you?"
+
+The girl turned half round in her chair. She was fronting a mirror. She
+caught a momentary impression of herself--pallid, hollow-eyed, weary. She
+sighed.
+
+"There are other ways of forgetting," she murmured. "There is work."
+
+Her mother laughed scornfully.
+
+"You have chosen your way," she said, "let me choose mine. Turn round,
+Hester."
+
+The girl obeyed her languidly. Her mother eyed her with an attention she
+seldom vouchsafed to anything. Her plain black frock was ill-fitting and
+worn. She wore no ribbon or jewellery or adornment of any sort.
+Negatively her face was not ill-pleasing, but her figure was angular, and
+her complexion almost anæmic. The woman on the couch represented other
+things. She was tastefully, though somewhat elaborately dressed. She wore
+chains and trinkets about her neck, rings upon her fingers, and in her
+face had begun in earnest the tragic struggle between an actual forty and
+presumptive twenty. She laughed again, a little hardly.
+
+"And you are my daughter," she exclaimed. "You are one of the freaks of
+heredity. I'm perfectly certain you don't belong to me, and as for him--"
+
+"Stop!" the girl cried.
+
+The woman nodded.
+
+"Quite right," she said. "I didn't mean to mention him. I won't again.
+But we are different, aren't we? I wonder why you stay with me. I wonder
+you don't go and make a home for yourself somewhere. I know that you hate
+all the things I do, and care for, and all my friends. Why don't you go
+away? It would be more comfortable for both of us!"
+
+"I have no wish to go away," the girl said, softly, "and I don't think
+that we interfere with one another very much, do we? This is the first
+time I have ever made a remark about any--of your friends. To-night I
+cannot help it. Sir Leslie Borrowdean is Mr. Mannering's enemy. I am sure
+of it! That is why I do not like the idea of your going out with him. It
+doesn't seem to be right--and I am afraid."
+
+"Afraid! You little idiot!"
+
+"Sir Leslie Borrowdean is a very clever man," the girl said. "He is a
+very clever man, and he has been a lawyer. That sort of person knows how
+to ask questions--to--find out things."
+
+"Rubbish!" the woman remarked, sitting up on the couch. "Why do you try
+to make me so uncomfortable, Hester? Sir Leslie may be very clever, but
+I am not exactly a fool myself."
+
+She spoke confidently, but under the delicate coating of rouge her cheeks
+had whitened.
+
+"Besides," she continued, "Sir Leslie has never even mentioned Mr.
+Mannering's name in anything except the most casual way. You don't
+understand everything, Hester. Of course Lena and Billy Aswell and Rothe
+and all of them are all right, but they are just a little--well, you
+would call it fast, and it does one good to be seen with a different set
+sometimes. Sir Leslie Borrowdean and his friends are altogether
+different, of course."
+
+The girl bent over her work.
+
+"No doubt, mother," she answered, "There's Mary stamping on the floor.
+I expect she has your bath ready."
+
+An hour or so later Mrs. Phillimore departed in a hired brougham.
+Her hair had been carefully arranged by a local expert who had an
+establishment in the next street, her pink silk gown had come through the
+ordeal of cleansing with remarkable success, and the heels on her new
+evening shoes resembled more than anything else, miniature stilts. Her
+face was wreathed in smiles, and she possessed the good conscience and
+light heart of a woman who feels that she has made a successful toilette.
+All the vague misgivings of a short while ago had vanished. She gave her
+hair a final touch in the side window of the carriage as she drove off,
+and quite forgot to wave her hand to Hester, who was standing at the
+window to see her go. If any misgivings remained at all between the two,
+they were not with her. She settled herself back amongst the cushions
+with a little sigh of content. Sir Leslie was a most charming person, and
+evidently not at all insensible to her charms. She was sure that she was
+going to have a delightful evening.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Borrowdean, if he possessed no conscience, was not altogether free from
+some kindred eccentricity. He was reminded sharply enough of the fact
+about one o'clock the next morning, when the door of the little house on
+Merton Street was suddenly opened before he could touch the bell. Framed
+in a little slanting gleam of light, Hester, still wearing her plain
+black gown, stood and looked at him. His careless words of explanation
+died away upon his lips. The fire which flashed from her hollow eyes
+seemed to wither up the very sources of speech within him. The half
+lights were kind to her. He saw nothing of the hollow cheeks. The
+weariness of her pose and manner had passed like magic away. She stood
+there, erect as a dart, her head thrown back, a curious mixture of scorn,
+of loathing, and of fear in her expression. She looked at him steadily,
+and he felt his cheeks burn. He was ashamed--ashamed of himself, ashamed
+of his errand.
+
+"Your mother," he said, struggling to look away from her, "is--a little
+unwell. The heat of the room--"
+
+She swept down the steps and passed him. Before he could reach her side
+she was tugging at the handle of the carriage door.
+
+"Mother," she cried, through the window, "undo the door!"
+
+But Mrs. Phillimore made no answer. When at last the door was opened she
+was discovered half asleep in a corner. Her hair was in some disorder,
+and her cheeks no longer preserved that even colouring which is a result
+of the artistic use of the rouge-pot. Her head was thrown back, and she
+was apparently asleep. Hester stifled a sob. She took her mother by the
+arm, and shook her.
+
+Mrs. Phillimore sat up and smiled a sleepy smile. She made a few
+incoherent remarks. They helped her into the house and into an
+easy-chair, where she promptly turned her face towards the cushions and
+resumed her slumber. Sir Leslie moved towards the door, then hesitated.
+
+"Miss Phillimore," he said, "I cannot tell you how sorry I am that this
+should have happened."
+
+She was on her knees before her mother. She turned and rose slowly to
+her feet. Sir Leslie never quite forgot her gesture as she motioned him
+towards the door. It was one of the most uncomfortable moments of his
+life.
+
+"I am afraid--"
+
+She did not speak a word, yet Sir Leslie obeyed what seemed to him more
+eloquent than words. He turned and left the room and the house. Without
+any change in her tense expression she waited until she heard him go.
+Then she sank upon her knees on the hearthrug, and hid her face in her
+hands.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X
+
+THE MAN WITH A MOTIVE
+
+
+Mannering sat alone in the shade of his cedar tree. He had walked in his
+rose-garden amongst a wilderness of drooping blossoms, for the season of
+roses was gone. He had crossed the marshland seawards, only to find a
+little crowd of holiday-makers in possession of the golf links and the
+green tufted stretch of sandy shore. The day had been long, almost
+irksome. A fit of restlessness had driven him from his study. He seemed
+to have lost all power of concentration. For once his brain had failed
+him. The shadowy companions who stood ever between him and solitude
+remained uninvoked. His cigar had burnt out between his fingers. He threw
+it impatiently away. These were the days, the hours he dreaded.
+
+Clara came down the garden from the house, and seeing him, crossed the
+lawn and sat down beside him.
+
+"Why, my dear uncle," she exclaimed, "you look almost as dull as I feel!
+Let us be miserable together!"
+
+"With all my heart," he answered. "Whilst we are about it, can we invent
+a cause?"
+
+"Invent!" she repeated. "I do not think we need either of us look very
+far. Every one seems to have gone away whose presence made this place
+endurable. Uncle, do you know when Mrs. Handsell is coming back? She
+promised to write, and I have never heard a word!"
+
+Mannering turned his head. A little rustling wind had stolen in from
+seaward. Above their heads flights of sea-gulls were floating out towards
+the creeks. He watched them idly until they dropped down.
+
+"I do not think that she will come back at all," he said, quietly.
+"I heard to-day that the place was to let again."
+
+"And Sir Leslie Borrowdean?"
+
+"I think you may take it for granted," Mannering remarked, dryly, "that
+we shall see no more of him."
+
+The girl leaned back and sighed.
+
+"Uncle, what is it that makes you such a hermit?" she asked.
+
+"Age, perhaps, and experience," he answered, lightly. "There are not many
+people in the world, Clara, who are worth while!"
+
+"Mrs. Handsell was worth while," she murmured.
+
+Mannering did not reply.
+
+"And Sir Leslie Borrowdean," she continued, "was more than just worth
+while. I think that he was delightful."
+
+"Very young ladies, and very old ones," Mannering remarked, grimly,
+"generally like Borrowdean."
+
+"And what about Mrs. Handsell?" she asked, with a spice of malice in her
+tone.
+
+"Mrs. Handsell," Mannering answered, coolly, "was a very charming woman.
+Since both these people have passed out of our lives, Clara, I scarcely
+see why we need discuss them."
+
+"One must talk about something," she answered. "At least I must talk, and
+you must pretend to listen. I positively cannot exist in the house by
+myself any longer."
+
+"Where is Richard?" Mannering asked.
+
+"Gone into Norwich to dine at the barracks with some stupid men. Not that
+I mind his going," she added, hastily. "I wish he'd stay away for a
+month. Of course he's a very good sort, and all that, but he's deadly
+monotonous. Uncle, really, as a matter of curiosity, before I get to be
+an old woman I should like to see one other young man."
+
+"Plenty on the links just now!"
+
+"I know it. I sat out near the ninth hole all this morning. There are
+some Cambridge boys who looked quite nice. One of them was really
+delightful when I showed him where his ball was, but I can't consider
+that an introduction, can I? Heavens, who's this?"
+
+Behind the trim maid-servant already crossing the lawn, and within a few
+yards of them, came a strange, almost tragical, figure. Her plain black
+clothes and hat were powdered with dust, there were deep lines under her
+eyes, she swayed a little when she walked, as though with fatigue. She
+seemed to bring with her into the cool, quiet garden, with its country
+odours and general air of peace, an alien note. One almost heard the deep
+undercry from a far-away world of suffering--the great, ever-moving
+wheels seemed to have caught her up and thrown her down in this most
+incongruous of places. Clara, in her cool white dress, her fresh
+complexion, her general air of health and girlish vigour, seemed, as she
+rose to her feet, a creature of another sex, almost of another world. The
+two girls exchanged for a moment wondering glances. Then Mannering
+intervened.
+
+"Hester!" he exclaimed. "Why--is there anything wrong?"
+
+"Nothing--very serious," she answered. "But I had to see you. I thought
+that I had better come."
+
+He held out his hands.
+
+"You have had a tiring journey," he said. "You must come into the house
+and let them find you something to eat. Clara, this is Hester Phillimore,
+the daughter of an old friend of mine. Will you see about a room for her,
+and lend her anything she requires?"
+
+"Of course," Clara answered. "Won't you come into the house with me?" she
+added pleasantly to the girl. "You must be horribly tired travelling this
+hot weather, and this is such an out-of-the-way corner of the world!"
+
+Hester lingered for a moment, glancing nervously at Mannering.
+
+"I must go back to-night," she said. "I only came because I thought that
+it would be quicker than writing."
+
+"To-night?" he exclaimed. "But, my dear girl, that is impossible. There
+are no trains, and you are tired out already. Go into the house with my
+niece, and we will have a talk afterwards."
+
+He walked across the lawn with them, talking pleasantly to Hester,
+as though her visit were in no sense of the word unpleasant, or an
+extraordinary event. But when he returned to his seat under the cedar
+tree his whole expression was changed. The lines about his face had
+insensibly deepened. He leaned a little forward, looking with weary,
+unseeing eyes into the tangled shrubbery. Had all men, he wondered, this
+secret chapter in their lives--the one sore place so impossible to
+forget, the cupboard of shadows never wholly closed, shadows which at any
+moment might steal out and encompass his darkening life? He sat there
+motionless, and his thoughts travelled backwards. There were many things
+in his life which he had forgotten, but never this. Every word that had
+been spoken, every detail in that tragic little scene seemed to glide
+into his memory with a distinctness and amplitude which time had never
+for one second dimmed. So it must be until the end. He forgot the girl
+and her errand. He forgot the carefully cultivated philosophy which for
+so many years had helped him towards forgetfulness. So he sat until the
+sound of their voices upon the lawn recalled him to the present.
+
+"I will leave you to have your talk with uncle," Clara said. "Afterwards
+I will come back to you. There he is, sitting under the cedar tree."
+
+The girl came swiftly over to his side. For a moment the compassion which
+he had always felt for her swept away the memory of his own sorrow. Her
+pallid, colourless face had lost everything except expression. If the
+weariness, which seemed to have found a home in her eyes, was just now
+absent, it was because a worse thing was shining out of them--a fear,
+of which there were traces even in her hurried walk and tone. He rose at
+once and held out his hands.
+
+"Come and sit down, Hester," he said, "and don't look so frightened."
+
+She obeyed him at once.
+
+"I am frightened," she said, "because I feel that I ought not to have
+come here, and yet I thought that you ought to know at once what has
+happened. Sir Leslie Borrowdean has been coming to see mother. Last night
+he took her out to dinner. She came home--late--she was not quite
+herself. This morning she was frightened and hysterical. She said--that
+she had been talking."
+
+"To Sir Leslie Borrowdean?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+Mannering showed no signs of dismay. He took the girl's thin white hand
+in his, and held it almost affectionately.
+
+"I am very glad to know this at once, dear," he said, "and you did what
+was right and kind when you came to see me. But Sir Leslie Borrowdean has
+no reason to make himself my enemy. On the contrary, just now he seems
+particularly anxious to cultivate my friendship."
+
+"Then why," the girl asked, "has he gone out of his way to--to--"
+
+Mannering stopped her.
+
+"He had a motive, of course. Borrowdean is one of those men who do
+nothing without a motive. I believe that I can even guess what it is.
+Don't let this thing distress you too much, Hester. I do not think that
+we have anything to worry about."
+
+"But he knows!"
+
+"I could not imagine a man," Mannering answered, "better able to keep a
+secret."
+
+The girl sat silent for a moment.
+
+"I suppose I have been an idiot," she remarked.
+
+"You have been nothing of the sort," Mannering asserted, firmly. "You
+have done just what is kind, and what will help me to save the situation.
+I must confess that I should not like to have been taken by surprise. You
+have saved me from that. Now let us put the whole subject away for a
+time. How I wish that you could stay here for a few days."
+
+The girl smiled a little piteously.
+
+"I ought not to have left her even for so long as this," she said. "I
+must go back to-morrow morning by the first train."
+
+He nodded. He felt that it was useless to combat her resolution.
+
+"You and I," he said, gravely, "have both our burdens to carry. Only it
+seems a little unfair that Providence should have made my back so much
+the broader. Listen, Hester!"
+
+The full murmur of the sea growing louder and louder as the salt water
+flowed up into the creeks betokened the change of tide. Faint wreaths of
+mist were rising up from over the shadowy marshland. Above them were the
+stars. He laid his hand upon her shoulder.
+
+"Dear child!" he said, "I think that you understand how it is that the
+burden, after all, is easier for me. A man may forget his troubles here,
+for all the while there is this eternal background of peaceful things."
+
+Her hand stole into his.
+
+"Yes," she murmured, "I understand. Don't let them ever bring you away."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI
+
+MANNERING'S ALTERNATIVE
+
+
+Once again Mannering found himself in the over-scented, overheated room,
+which was perhaps of all places in the world the one he hated the most.
+Fresh from the wind-swept places of his country home, he found the
+atmosphere intolerable. After a few minutes' waiting he threw open the
+windows and leaned out. Hester was walking in the Square somewhere. He
+had a shrewd idea that she had been sent out of the way. With a restless
+impatience of her absence he awaited the interview which he dreaded.
+
+Her mother's coming took him a little by surprise. She seemed to have
+laid aside all her usual customs. She entered the room quietly. She
+greeted him almost nervously. She was dressed, without at any rate any
+obvious attempt to attract, in a plain black gown, and with none of the
+extravagances in which she sometimes delighted. Her usual boisterous
+confidence of manner seemed to have deserted her. Her face, without its
+skilful touches of rouge, looked thin, and almost peaked.
+
+"I am so glad that you came, Lawrence," she said. "It was very good of
+you."
+
+She glanced towards the opened windows, and he closed them at once.
+
+"I am afraid," he said, "that you have not been well!"
+
+There was a touch of her old self in the hardness of her low laugh.
+
+"It is remorse!" she declared. "I think that for once in my life I have
+permitted myself to think! It is a great mistake. One loses confidence
+when one realizes what a beast one is."
+
+He waited in silence. It seemed to him the best thing. She sat down a
+little wearily. He remained standing a few feet away.
+
+"I have given you away, Lawrence," she said, quietly.
+
+"So," he remarked, "I understand."
+
+"Hester has told you, of course. I am not blaming her. She did quite
+right. Only I should have told you myself. I wanted to be the first to
+assure you of this. Our secret is quite safe. The man--with whom I made
+a fool of myself--has given me his word of honour."
+
+"Sir Leslie Borrowdean's--word of honour!" Mannering remarked, with slow
+scorn. "Do you know the man, I wonder?"
+
+"I know that he wishes to be your friend, and not your enemy," she said.
+
+"He chooses his friends for what they are worth to him," Mannering
+answered. "It is all a matter of self-interest. He has some idea of
+making me the stepping-stone to his advancement. I have a place just now
+in his scheme of life. But as for friendship! Borrowdean does not know
+the meaning of the word."
+
+"You speak bitterly," she remarked.
+
+"I know the man," he answered.
+
+"Will you tell me," she asked, "what it is that he wants of you?"
+
+He shrugged his shoulders.
+
+"Is this worth discussing between us?" he asked.
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Very well, then, you shall know. He wants me to re-enter political life,
+to be the jackal to pull the chestnuts out of the fire for him."
+
+"To re-enter political life! And why don't you?"
+
+Mannering turned abruptly round and looked her in the face. He had been
+gazing out of the window, wondering how long it would be before Hester
+returned.
+
+"Why don't I!" he repeated, a little vaguely. "How can you ask me such a
+question as that?"
+
+She was undisturbed. Again he marvelled at the change in her.
+
+"Is it so very extraordinary a question?" she said. "I have often
+wondered whether you meant to content yourself with your present life
+always. It is scarcely worthy of you, is it? You were born to other
+things than to live the life of a country gentleman. You dabble in
+literature, they say, and poke your stick into politics through the pages
+of the reviews. Why don't you take your coat off and play the game?"
+
+Mannering was silent for several moments. He was, however, meditating his
+own reply less than studying his questioner. Her attitude was amazing to
+him. She watched him all the time, frowning.
+
+"You are not usually so tongue-tied," she remarked, irritably. "Have you
+nothing to say to me?"
+
+"I am wondering," he said, quietly, "what has given birth to this sudden
+interest in my proceedings. What does it matter to you how my days are
+spent, or what manner of use I make of them?"
+
+"There was a time--" she began.
+
+"A time irretrievably past," he interrupted, shortly.
+
+"I am not so sure!" she declared, doubtfully.
+
+"What has Borrowdean to do with this?" he asked her, abruptly.
+
+"Borrowdean?"
+
+"Surely! Some one has been putting notions into your head."
+
+"Why take that for granted?" she asked, equably. "The pity of the whole
+thing is obvious enough, isn't it? Sometimes I think that we were a pair
+of fools. We played into the hands of fate. We were brought face to face
+with a terrible situation. Instead of meeting it bravely we played the
+coward. Why don't you forget, Lawrence, as I have done? Take up your work
+again. Set a seal upon--that memory."
+
+"I have outgrown my ambitions," he answered. "Life was hot enough in my
+veins then. Desire grows cold with the years. I am content."
+
+"But I," she answered, "am not."
+
+"We each chose our life," he reminded her.
+
+"Perhaps. I am not satisfied with my choice. You may be with yours."
+
+"I am."
+
+She leaned over towards him.
+
+"Once," she said, "you offered me what you called--atonement. I refused
+it. Just then it seemed horrible. Now that feeling has passed away. I am
+lonely, Lawrence, and I am weary of the sort of life I have been living.
+Supposing I asked you to make me that offer again?"
+
+Mannering turned slowly towards her. He was not a man who easily showed
+emotion, but there were traces of it now in his face. The hand which
+rested on the back of his chair shook. There was in his eyes the look of
+a man who sees evil things.
+
+"It is too late, Blanche," he said. "You cannot be in earnest?"
+
+"Why not?" she murmured, dropping her eyes. "I am tired of my life. What
+you owed me then you owe me now. Why should it be too late? I am not an
+old woman yet, nor are you an old man, and I am weary of being alone."
+
+Mannering walked to the window. His hand went to his forehead. It was
+damp and cold. He was afraid! If she were in earnest! And she spoke like
+a woman who knew her mind. She was always, he remembered, a creature of
+caprice. If she were really in earnest!
+
+"We have drifted too far apart, Blanche," he said, making an effort to
+face the situation. "Years ago this might have been possible. To-day it
+would be a dismal failure. My ways are not yours. The life I lead would
+bore you to death."
+
+"There is no reason why you should not alter it," she answered, calmly.
+"In fact, I should wish you to. Blakely all the year round would be an
+impossibility. You could come and live in London."
+
+He looked at her fixedly.
+
+"Have you forgotten?" he asked.
+
+She covered her face with her hands for a moment. If indeed she really
+felt any emotion it passed quickly away, for when she looked up again
+there were no traces left.
+
+"I have forgotten nothing," she declared, defiantly. "Only the horror and
+fear of it all has passed away. I don't see why I should suffer all my
+life. In fact, I don't mean to. I don't want to be a miserable, lonely
+old woman. I want a home, something different from this."
+
+Mannering faced her gravely.
+
+"Blanche," he said, "you are proposing something which would most surely
+ruin the rest of our lives. What we might have been to one another if
+things had been different it is hard to say. But this much is very
+certain. We belong now to different worlds. We have drifted apart with
+the years. Even the little we see of one another now is far from a
+pleasure to either of us. What you are suggesting would be simply
+suicidal."
+
+She was silent. He watched her anxiously. As a rule her face was easy
+enough to read. To-day it was impenetrable. He could not tell what was
+passing behind that still, almost stony, look. Her silence forced him
+again into speech.
+
+"You agree with me, surely, Blanche? You must agree with me?"
+
+She raised her head.
+
+"I am not sure that I do," she answered. "But at least I understand you.
+That is something! You want to go on as you are--apart from me. That is
+true, isn't it?"
+
+"Yes!"
+
+She nodded.
+
+"At least you are candid. You want your liberty--unfettered. What are you
+willing to pay for it?"
+
+He looked at her incredulously.
+
+"I do not quite understand!" he said.
+
+She laughed, and the laugh belonged to her old self.
+
+"Indeed! I thought that I was explicit enough, brutally explicit, even.
+What have you to offer me in place of your name and yourself? What
+sacrifice are you prepared to make?"
+
+He looked at her furtively, as though even then he doubted the
+significance of her words.
+
+"You have already half my income," he said, slowly.
+
+She shrugged her shoulders.
+
+"A thousand a year! What can one do on that? To live decently in town one
+needs much more."
+
+"It is as much as I can offer," he remarked, stiffly.
+
+"Then you should earn money," she declared. "It's easy enough for men
+with brains. Go back into politics instead of idling your time away down
+in Blakely. I mean it! I've no patience with men who have a right to a
+place in the world which they won't fill."
+
+"Surely," he remonstrated, "I may be allowed to choose the manner of my
+life!"
+
+"If you can afford to--yes," she answered. "But I want one of two things.
+The first seems to scare you to death even to think of. The second is
+more money--a good deal more money."
+
+"But," he protested, "even if I did as you suggested, and went back into
+politics, it would be some time, if ever, before I should be any better
+off."
+
+"I will wait until that time comes," she answered, "provided that when it
+does, you share with me."
+
+Then Mannering understood.
+
+"Upon my word," he exclaimed, "you are an apt conspirator indeed. All
+this time you have been fooling me. I even fancied--bah! How much is
+Borrowdean giving you for this?"
+
+"Nothing at all," she answered, coolly. "It is my own sincere desire
+for your welfare which has prompted all that I have said to you. I am
+ambitious for you, Lawrence. I should like to see you Prime Minister.
+I am sure you could be if you tried. You are letting your talents rust,
+and I don't approve of it!"
+
+The faint note of mockery in her tone was clearly apparent. Mannering
+found it hard to answer her calmly.
+
+"Come," he said, "put it into plain words. What does it mean? What do you
+want?"
+
+"Sir Leslie tells me," she said, raising her eyes and looking him in the
+face, "that his party is prepared to find you a safe seat to-morrow. I
+want you to give up your hermit's life and accept it."
+
+"And the alternative?"
+
+"You have it already before you. Your reception of it was not, I must
+admit, altogether flattering."
+
+"I am allowed," he said, "some short space of time for consideration?"
+
+"Until to-morrow, if you wish," she answered. "I imagine you know pretty
+well what you mean to do."
+
+He picked up his hat and turned towards the door.
+
+"Yes," he said, "I suppose I do!"
+
+
+
+
+BOOK II
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+BORROWDEAN MAKES A BARGAIN
+
+
+Borrowdean sank into the chair which Berenice had indicated, with a
+little sigh of relief.
+
+"These all-night sittings," he remarked, "get less of a joke as one
+advances in years. You read the reports this morning?"
+
+She nodded.
+
+"And Mannering's speech?"
+
+"Every word of it."
+
+"Our little conspiracy," he continued, "is bearing fruit. Honestly,
+Mannering is a surprise, even to me. After these years of rust I scarcely
+expected him to step back at once into all his former brilliancy. His
+speech last night was wonderful."
+
+"I heard it," she said. "You are quite right. It was wonderful."
+
+"You were in the House?" he asked, looking up quickly.
+
+"I was there till midnight," she answered.
+
+Borrowdean was thoughtful for a moment.
+
+"His speech," he remarked, "sounded even better than it read."
+
+"I thought so," she admitted. "He has all the smaller tricks of the
+orator, as well as the gift of eloquence. One can always listen to him
+with pleasure."
+
+"Will you pardon me," Borrowdean asked, "if I make a remark which may
+sound a little impertinent? You and Mannering were great friends at
+Blakely. On my first visit there you will remember that you did not
+attempt to conceal that there was more than an ordinary intimacy between
+you. Yet to-day I notice that there are indications on both your parts of
+a desire to avoid one another as much as possible. It seems to me a pity
+that you two should not be friends. Is there any small misunderstanding
+which a common friend--such as I trust I may call myself--might help
+to smooth away?"
+
+Berenice regarded him thoughtfully.
+
+"It is strange," she said, "that you should talk to me like this, you who
+are certainly responsible for any estrangement there may be between Mr.
+Mannering and myself. Please answer me this question. Why do you wish us
+to be friends?"
+
+Borrowdean shrugged his shoulders.
+
+"You and he and myself, with about a dozen others," he answered, "form
+the backbone of a political party. As time goes on we shall in all
+probability be drawn closer and closer together. It seems to me best that
+our alliance should be as real a thing as possible."
+
+Berenice smiled.
+
+"Rather a sentimental attitude for you, Sir Leslie," she remarked. "Have
+you ever considered the fact that any coolness there may be between
+Lawrence Mannering and myself is entirely due to you?"
+
+"To me!" he exclaimed.
+
+"Exactly! At Blakely we were on terms of the most intimate friendship. I
+had grown to like and respect him more than any man I had ever met. I
+don't know exactly why I should take you so far into my confidence, but I
+am inclined to do so. Our friendship seemed likely to develop into--other
+things."
+
+"My dear Duchess--"
+
+"Don't interrupt me! I have an idea that you were perfectly aware of it.
+Perhaps it did not suit your plans. At any rate, you made statements to
+me concerning him which, as you very well knew, were likely to alter my
+entire opinion of him. I had an idea that there was some code of honour
+between men which kept them from discussing the private life of their
+friends with a woman. You seem to have been troubled with no such
+scruples. You told me things about Lawrence Mannering which made it
+absolutely necessary that I should hear them confirmed or denied from his
+own lips."
+
+"You would rather have remained in ignorance, then?" he asked.
+
+"I would rather have remained in ignorance," she repeated, calmly. "Don't
+flatter yourself, Sir Leslie, that a woman ever has any real gratitude in
+her heart for the person who, out of friendship, or some other motive,
+destroys her ideals. I should have married Lawrence Mannering if you had
+not spoken."
+
+Borrowdean was silent. In his heart he was thinking how nearly one of the
+most cherished schemes of his life had gone awry.
+
+"I am afraid, then," he said, "that even at the risk of your further
+displeasure I have no regrets to offer you."
+
+"I do not desire your regrets," she answered, scornfully. "You did what
+it suited you to do, and I presume you are satisfied. As for the rest, I
+can assure you that the relations between Mr. Mannering and myself are
+such that the balance of your political apple-cart is not likely to be
+disturbed. Now let us talk of something else. I have said all that I have
+to say on this matter--"
+
+Sir Leslie was not entirely satisfied with the result of his afternoon
+call. He walked slowly from Grosvenor Square to a small house in Sloane
+Gardens, in front of which a well-appointed victoria was waiting. He
+looked around at the well-filled window-boxes, thick with geraniums and
+marguerites, at the coachman's new livery, at the evidences of luxury
+which met him the moment the door was opened, and his lips parted in a
+faint, unpleasant smile.
+
+"Poor Mannering," he murmured to himself. "What a millstone!"
+
+Mrs. Phillimore was at home. She would certainly see Sir Leslie, the
+trim parlour-maid thought, with a smile. She left him alone in a
+flower-scented drawing-room, crowded with rococo furniture and many
+knick-knacks, where he waited more or less impatiently for nearly twenty
+minutes. Then Mrs. Phillimore swept into the room, elaborately gowned for
+her drive in the park, dispersing perfumes in all directions and
+bestowing a dazzling smile upon him.
+
+"I felt very much inclined not to see you at all," she declared. "How
+dared you keep away from me all this time? You haven't been near me since
+I moved in here. What do you think of my little house?"
+
+"Charming!" he declared.
+
+"Every one likes it," she remarked. "Such a time I had choosing the
+furniture. Hester wouldn't help with a single thing. You know that she
+has left me?"
+
+"I understood that she had gone to Mr. Mannering as secretary," he
+answered. "She has done typing for him for some time, hasn't she?"
+
+Mrs. Phillimore nodded.
+
+"Worships him, the little fool!" she remarked. "I must admit I detest
+clever men. You are all so dull, and such scheming brutes, too."
+
+Borrowdean smiled. A certain rough-and-ready humour about this woman
+always appealed to him. He looked around.
+
+"You seem to have done very nicely with that little offering," he said.
+
+"Oh, ready money goes a long way," she declared, carelessly.
+
+"And when it is spent?" he asked. "Five thousand pounds is not an
+inexhaustible sum."
+
+"By the time it is spent," she answered, "your party will be in, and I
+suppose you will make Lawrence something."
+
+Borrowdean regarded the woman thoughtfully.
+
+"Has it ever occurred to you," he asked, "that the time is likely to come
+when Mannering might want his money for himself? He might want to marry,
+for instance."
+
+She laughed mirthlessly, but without a shade of uneasiness.
+
+"You don't know Lawrence," she declared, scornfully. "He'd never do that
+whilst I was alive."
+
+"I am not so sure," Borrowdean answered, calmly. "Between ourselves,
+I cannot see that your claim upon him amounts to very much."
+
+"Then you're a fool!" she declared, brusquely.
+
+"No, I'm not," Borrowdean assured her, blandly. "Now I fancy that I could
+tell you something which would surprise you very much."
+
+"Has he been making love to any one?" she asked, quickly.
+
+"Something of the sort," he admitted. "Mannering is quixotic, of course,
+and that hermit life of his down in Norfolk has made him more so. Now he
+has come back again into the world it is just possible that he may see
+things differently. I flatter myself that I am a man of common sense. I
+know how the whole affair seems to me, and I tell you frankly that I can
+see nothing from the point of view of honour to prevent Mannering
+marrying any woman he chooses. I think it very possible that he may
+readjust his whole point of view."
+
+The woman looked around her, and outside, where her victoria was waiting.
+At last she had attained to an environment such as she had all her life
+desired. The very idea that at any moment it might be swept away sent a
+cold shiver through her. Borrowdean had a trick of speaking convincingly.
+And besides--
+
+"Who is the woman?" she asked.
+
+"I had been wondering," Borrowdean said, "whether it would not be better
+to tell you, so that you might be on your guard. The woman is the Duchess
+of Lenchester."
+
+She stared at him.
+
+"You're in earnest?"
+
+"Absolutely!"
+
+Her face hardened. Whatever other feelings she may have had for
+Mannering, she had lived so long with the thought that he belonged to
+her, at least as a wage-earning animal, a person whose province it
+was to make her ways smooth so far as his means permitted, that the
+thought of losing him stirred in her a dull, jealous anger.
+
+"I'd stop it!" she declared. "I'd go and tell her everything."
+
+"I am not sure," Borrowdean continued, smoothly, "that that would be the
+best course. Supposing that you were to tell her the story just as you
+told it to me. It is just possible that her point of view might be mine.
+She might regard Lawrence Mannering as a quixotic person, and endeavour
+to persuade him that your claim was scarcely so binding as he seems to
+imagine. In any case, I do not think that your story would prevent her
+marrying him."
+
+"Then all I can say is that she is a woman with a very queer sense of
+right and wrong," Mrs. Phillimore declared, angrily.
+
+Borrowdean smiled.
+
+"A woman," he said, "who is fond of a man is apt to have her judgment
+a little warped. The Duchess is a woman of fine perceptions and sound
+judgment. But she is attracted by Lawrence Mannering. She admires him.
+He is the sort of person who appeals to her imagination. These feelings
+might easily become, if they have not already developed into, something
+else. And I tell you again that I do not believe your story would stop
+her from marrying him."
+
+She leaned a little towards him.
+
+"What would?" she asked, earnestly.
+
+He hesitated.
+
+"Well," he said, "I think I could tell you that!"
+
+She held up her hand.
+
+"Stop, please," she said. "I want to ask you something else. Are you
+Lawrence's enemy?"
+
+"I? Why, of course not!"
+
+"Then where do you come in?" she asked, bluntly. "You couldn't persuade
+me that it is interest on my account which brings you here and makes you
+tell me these things. You don't care a button for me."
+
+Borrowdean took her hand and leaned forward in his chair. She snatched it
+away.
+
+"Oh, rot!" she exclaimed. "I may be a fool, but I'm not quite fool enough
+for that. I'm simply a useful person for the moment in some scheme of
+yours, and I just want to know what that scheme is. That's all! I'm not
+the sort of woman you'd waste a moment with, except for some purpose of
+your own. You've proved that. You wormed my story out of me very
+cleverly, but I haven't quite forgotten it yet, you know. And to tell you
+the truth," she continued, "you're not my sort, either. You and Lawrence
+Mannering are something of the same kidney after all, though he's worth
+a dozen of you. You've neither of you any time for play in the world, and
+that sort of man doesn't appeal to me. Now where do you come in?"
+
+Borrowdean looked at her thoughtfully. He had the air of a man a trifle
+piqued. Perhaps for the first time he realized that Blanche Phillimore
+was not altogether an unattractive-looking woman. If she had desired to
+stir him from his indifference she could not have chosen any more
+effectual means.
+
+"I am not going to argue with you," he said, quietly. "I have ambitions,
+it is true, and the world is not exactly a playground for me.
+Nevertheless, I am not an ascetic like Mannering. The world, the flesh
+and the devil are very much to me what they are to other men. But in a
+sense you have cornered me, and you shall have the truth. I want to marry
+the Duchess of Lenchester myself."
+
+She nodded.
+
+"That's right," she said. "Now we know where we are. You want to marry
+the Duchess, and therefore you don't want her to have Lawrence. You think
+that I can stop it, and as I don't want him married, either, you come to
+me. That is reasonable. Now how can I prevent it?"
+
+"By a slight variation from your story," he answered. "In fact, words are
+not needed. A suggestion only would be enough, and circumstances," he
+added, glancing around, "are strongly in favour of that suggestion."
+
+"You mean--"
+
+He shrugged his shoulders.
+
+"Mannering is security for your lease," he remarked. "You pay in his
+cheques to your bank every quarter. He occupies just that position which
+in a general way is capable of one explanation only."
+
+"Well?"
+
+"Let the Duchess believe him, or continue to believe him, to be an
+ordinary man--instead of a fool--and she will never marry him."
+
+"And she will you?"
+
+"I hope so!"
+
+She leaned back in her chair. He could not altogether understand her
+silence. Surely she could have no scruples?
+
+"It seems to me," she said at last, "that I am to play your game for
+nothing. I don't care so very much, after all, if he marries. He'd settle
+all he could on me. In fact, I should have just as much claim on him as I
+have now."
+
+"I did not say that you should play it for nothing," he answered. "I want
+us to understand each other, because I have an idea that you may be
+seeing something of the Duchess at any moment. Let us put it this way.
+Suppose I promise to give you a diamond necklace of the value of, say
+five thousand pounds, the day I marry the Duchess!"
+
+She rose and put pen and paper before him. He shook his head.
+
+"I can't put an arrangement of that sort on paper," he protested. "You
+must rely upon my word of honour."
+
+She held out the pen to him.
+
+"On paper, or the whole thing is off absolutely," she declared.
+
+"You won't trust me?"
+
+She looked at him.
+
+"There isn't much honour about an arrangement of this sort, is there?"
+she said. "It has to be on paper, or not at all."
+
+A carriage stopped outside. They heard the bell.
+
+"That," she remarked, "may be the Duchess of Lenchester."
+
+He caught up the pen and wrote a few hurried lines. The smile with which
+he handed it to her was not altogether successful.
+
+"After all, you know," he said, "there should be honour amongst thieves."
+
+"No doubt there is," she answered. "Only thieves are a cut above us,
+aren't they?"
+
+"I don't believe," Borrowdean said to himself, as he reached the
+pavement, "that that woman is such a fool as she seems."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+
+"CHERCHEZ LA FEMME"
+
+
+Mannering hated dinner parties, but this one had been a necessity.
+Nevertheless, if he had known who his companion for the evening was fated
+to be he would most certainly have stayed away. Her first question showed
+him that she had no intention of ignoring memories which to him were
+charged with the most subtle pain.
+
+He looked down the table, and back again into her face.
+
+"You are quite right," he said. "This is different. We cannot compare. We
+can judge only by effect--the effect upon ourselves."
+
+"Can you be analytical and yet remain within the orbit of my
+understanding?" she asked, with a faint smile. "If so, I should like to
+know exactly how you feel about it all."
+
+He passed a course with a somewhat weary gesture of refusal, and leaned
+back in his chair.
+
+"You are comprehensive--as usual," he remarked. "Just then I was
+wondering whether the perfume of these banks of hot-house flowers--I
+don't know what they are--was as sweet as the odour of the salt from
+the creeks, or my roses when the night wind touched them."
+
+"You were wondering! And what have you decided?"
+
+"Ah, I must not say. In any case you would not agree with me. Wasn't it
+you who once scoffed at my idyll in the wilderness?"
+
+"I do not think that I believe in idylls, nowadays," she answered. "One
+risks so many disappointments when one believes in anything."
+
+He raised his eyebrows.
+
+"You did not talk like this at Blakely," he remarked.
+
+"I am nearly a year older," she answered, "and a year wiser."
+
+"You pain me," he answered, with a little sigh. "You are a person of
+intelligence, and you talk of growing wiser with the years. Don't you
+know that the only supreme wisdom is the wisdom of the child? Our
+inherent ignorance is fed and nourished by experience."
+
+"You are hiding yourself," she remarked, "behind a fence of words--words
+that mean less than nothing! I don't suppose that even you would hesitate
+to admit that you have come into a larger world. You may have to pay for
+it. We all do. But at any rate it is an atmosphere which breeds men."
+
+"And changes women," he murmured, under his breath.
+
+She did not speak to him for several moments. Then the alteration in her
+tone and manner was almost marked.
+
+"You mentioned Blakely a few minutes ago," she said. "I wonder whether
+you remember our discussion there upon precisely what has come to pass."
+
+"Perfectly!"
+
+"I remember that in those days," she continued, reflectively, "you were
+very firm indeed, or was it my poor arguments that were at fault? Your
+vegetable and sentimental existence was a part of yourself. Ambition! You
+had forgotten what it was. Duty! You spouted individualism by the hour.
+Gratify my curiosity, won't you? Tell me what made you change your mind?"
+
+Mannering was silent for a moment. A close observer might have noticed
+a certain alteration in his face. A touch of the coming weariness was
+already there.
+
+"I have never changed my mind," he answered, quietly. "My inclinations
+to-day are what they have always been."
+
+She dropped her voice a little.
+
+"You puzzle me," she said, softly. "Do you mean that it was your sense of
+duty which was awakened?"
+
+"No, I do not mean that," he answered. "Forgive me--but I cannot tell you
+what I do mean. Circumstances brought me here against my will."
+
+"You talk like a slave," she said, lightly enough. She, too, was brave.
+She drank wine to keep the colour in her cheeks, and she told herself
+that the pain at her heart was nothing. Nevertheless, some words of
+Borrowdean's were mocking her all the while.
+
+"We are all slaves," he answered. "The folly of it all is when we stop to
+think. Then we realize it."
+
+Their conversation was like a strangled thing. Neither made any serious
+effort to re-establish it. It was a great dinner party, chiefly
+political, and long drawn out. Afterwards came a reception, and Mannering
+was at once surrounded. It was nearly midnight when by chance they came
+face to face again. She touched him with her fan, and leaned aside from
+the little group by whom she was surrounded.
+
+"Are you very much occupied, Mr. Mannering," she asked, lightly, "or
+could you spare me a moment?"
+
+He stopped short. Whatever surprise he may have felt he concealed.
+
+"I am entirely at your service, Duchess," he answered. "Mr. Harrison will
+excuse me, I am sure," he added, turning to his companion.
+
+She rested her fingers upon his arm. The house belonged to a relative of
+hers, and she knew where to find a quiet spot. When they were alone she
+did not hesitate for a moment.
+
+"Lawrence," she said, quietly, "will you imagine for a moment that we are
+back again at Blakely?"
+
+"I would to God we were!" he answered, impulsively. "That is--if you wish
+it too!"
+
+She did not answer at once. The sudden abnegation of his reserve took her
+by surprise. She had to readjust her words.
+
+"At least," she said, "there are many things about Blakely which I regret
+all the time. You know, of course, the chief one, our own altered selves.
+I know, Lawrence, that I need to ask your forgiveness. I came there under
+an assumed name, and I will admit that my coming was part of a scheme
+between Ronalds, Rochester and myself. Well, I am ready to ask your
+forgiveness for that. I don't think you ought to refuse it me. It doesn't
+alter anything that happened. It doesn't even affect it. You must believe
+that!"
+
+"I believe it, if you tell me so," he answered.
+
+"I do tell you," she declared. "I can explain it all. I am longing to
+have it all off my mind. But first of all, there is just one thing which
+I want to ask you."
+
+His face as he looked towards her gave her almost a shock. Very little
+was left of his healthy colouring. Already there were lines under his
+eyes, and he was certainly thinner. And there was something else which
+almost appalled her. There was fear in his manner. He sat like a man
+waiting for sentence, a man fore-doomed.
+
+"I want to know," she said, "what has brought you--here. I want to know
+what manner of persuasion has prevailed--when mine was so ineffectual.
+Don't think that I am not glad that you decided as you did. I am
+glad--very. You are in your rightful place, and I am only too thankful
+to hear about you, and read--and watch. But--we are jealous creatures, we
+women, you know, and I want to know whose and what arguments prevailed,
+when mine were so very insufficient."
+
+He answered her without hesitation, but his tone was dull and spiritless.
+
+"I cannot tell you!"
+
+There was a short silence. She gathered her skirts for a moment in her
+hand as though about to rise, but apparently changed her mind. She waited
+for some time, and then she spoke again.
+
+"Perhaps you think that I ought not to ask?"
+
+He looked at her hopelessly.
+
+"No, I don't think that. You have a right to ask. But it doesn't alter
+things, does it? I can't tell you."
+
+"You asked me to marry you."
+
+"It was at Blakely. We were so far out of the world--such a different
+world. I think that I had forgotten all that I wished to forget.
+Everything seemed possible there."
+
+"You mean that you would have married me and told me nothing of
+circumstances in your life, so momentous that they have practically
+exercised in this matter of your return to politics a compelling
+influence over you?"
+
+"I am sure," he said, "that I should not have told you!"
+
+His unhappiness moved her. She still lingered. She drew a little breath,
+and she went a good deal further than she had meant to go.
+
+"It has been suggested to me," she said, "that your reappearance was due
+to a woman's influence. Is this true?"
+
+"A woman had something to do with it," he admitted.
+
+"Who is she?"
+
+"Her name," he answered, "is Blanche Phillimore. It was the person to
+whom you yourself alluded."
+
+The Duchess maintained her self-control. She was quite pale, however, and
+her tone was growing ominously harder.
+
+"Is she a connection of yours?"
+
+"No!"
+
+"Is there anything which you could tell me about her?"
+
+"No!"
+
+"Yet at her bidding you have done--what you refused me."
+
+"I had no choice! Borrowdean saw to that," he remarked, bitterly.
+
+She rose to her feet. She was pale, and her lips were quivering, but she
+was splendidly handsome.
+
+"What sort of a man are you, Lawrence Mannering?" she asked, steadily.
+"You play at idealism, you asked me to marry you. Yet all the time there
+was this background."
+
+"It was madness," he admitted. "But remember it was Mrs. Handsell whom I
+asked to be my wife."
+
+"What difference does that make? She was a woman, too, I suppose, to be
+honoured--or insulted--by your choice!"
+
+"There was no question of insult, I think."
+
+She looked at him steadfastly. Perhaps for a moment her thoughts
+travelled back to those unforgotten days in the rose-gardens at Blakely,
+to the man whose delicate but wholesome joy in the wind and the sun and
+the flowers, the sea-stained marshes and the windy knolls where they had
+so often stood together, she could not forget. His life had seemed to her
+then so beautiful a thing. The elementary purity of his thoughts and
+aspirations were unmistakable. She told herself passionately that there
+must be a way out.
+
+"Lawrence," she said, "we are man and woman, not boy and girl. You asked
+me to marry you once, and I hesitated, only because of one thing. I do
+not wish to look into any hidden chambers of your life. I wish to know
+nothing, save of the present. What claim has this woman Blanche
+Phillimore upon you?"
+
+"It is her secret," he answered, "not mine alone."
+
+"She lives in your house--through her you are a poor man--through her you
+are back again, a worker in the world."
+
+"Yes!"
+
+"It must always be so?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"And you have nothing more to say?"
+
+"If I dared," he said, raising his eyes to hers, "I would say--trust me!
+I am not exactly--one of the beasts of the field."
+
+"Will you not trust me, then? I am not a foolish girl. I am a woman. You
+may destroy an ideal, but there would be something left."
+
+"I can tell you no more."
+
+"Then it is to be good-bye?"
+
+"If you say so!"
+
+She turned slowly away. He watched her disappear. Afterwards, with a
+curious sense of unreality, he remained quite still, his eyes still fixed
+upon the portiere through which she had passed.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III
+
+ONE OF THE "SUFFERERS"
+
+
+Mannering kept no carriage, and he left Downing Street on foot. The
+little house which he had taken furnished for the season was in the
+somewhat less pretentious neighborhood of Portland Crescent, and as there
+were no hansoms within hail he started to walk home. An attempt at a
+short cut landed him presently in a neighborhood which he failed to
+recognize. He paused, looking about him for some one from whom to inquire
+the way. Then he at once realized what he had already more than once
+suspected. He was being followed.
+
+The footsteps ceased as he himself had halted. It was a wet night, and
+the street was ill-lit. Nevertheless, Mannering could distinguish the
+figure of a man standing in the shadows of the houses, apparently to
+escape observation. For a moment he hesitated. His follower could
+scarcely be an ordinary hooligan, for not more than fifty yards away were
+the lights of a great thoroughfare, and even in this street, quiet though
+it was, there were people passing to and fro. His curiosity prompted him
+to subterfuge. He took a cigarette from his case, and commenced in a
+leisurely manner the operation of striking a light. Instantly the figure
+of the man began to move cautiously towards him.
+
+Mannering's eyes and hearing, keenly developed by his country life,
+apprised him of every step the man took. He heard him pause whilst a
+couple of women passed on the other side of the way. Afterwards his
+approach became swifter and more stealthy. Barely in time to avoid, he
+scarcely knew what, Mannering turned sharply round.
+
+"What do you want with me?" he demanded.
+
+The man showed no signs of confusion. Mannering, as he looked sternly
+into his face, lost all fear of personal assault. He was neatly but
+shabbily dressed, pale, and with a slight red moustache. He had a
+somewhat broad forehead, eyes with more than an ordinary lustre, and, in
+somewhat striking contradiction to the rest of his features, a large
+sensitive mouth with a distinctly humorous curve. Even now its corners
+were receding into a smile, which had in it, however, other elements than
+mirth alone.
+
+"You are Mr. Lawrence Mannering?"
+
+"That is my name," Mannering answered, "but if you want to speak to me
+why don't you come up like a man, instead of dogging my footsteps? It
+looked as though you wanted to take me by surprise. What is that you are
+hiding up your sleeve?"
+
+The man held it out, placed it even in Mannering's hand.
+
+"A life preserver, steel, as you see, and with a beautiful spring. Deadly
+weapon, isn't it, sir? Even a half-hearted sort of blow might kill a
+man."
+
+Mannering swung the weapon lightly in his hand. It cut the air with a
+soft, sickly swish.
+
+"What were you doing following me, on tiptoe, with this in your hand?" he
+asked, sternly.
+
+"Well," the man answered, as though forced to confess an unpleasant
+truth, "I am very much afraid that I was going to hit you with it."
+
+Mannering looked up and down the street for a policeman.
+
+"Indeed!" he said. "And may I ask why you changed your mind?"
+
+"It was an inspiration," the man answered, easily. "To tell you the
+truth, the clumsiness of the whole thing grated very much upon me.
+Personally, I ran no risk, don't think it was that. My escape was very
+carefully provided for. But one thinks quickly in moments of excitement,
+and it seemed to me as I took those last few steps that I saw a better
+way."
+
+"A better way," Mannering repeated, puzzled. "I am afraid I don't quite
+understand you. I presume that you meant to rob me. You would not have
+found it worth while, by the bye."
+
+The man laughed softly.
+
+"My dear sir," he exclaimed, "do I look like a robber? Rumour says that
+you are a poor man. I should think it very likely that, although I am not
+a rich one, I am at least as well off as you."
+
+Mannering looked out no more for the policeman. He was getting
+interested.
+
+"Come," he said, "I should like to understand what all this means. You
+were going to tap me on the head with this particularly unpleasant
+weapon, and your motive was not robbery. I am not aware of ever having
+seen you before. I am not aware of having an enemy in the world. Explain
+yourself."
+
+"I should be charmed," the man answered. "I do not wish to keep you
+standing here, however. Will you allow me to walk with you towards your
+home? You can retain possession of that little trifle, if you like," he
+added, pointing to the weapon which was still in Mannering's hand. "I can
+assure you that I have nothing else of the sort in my possession. You can
+feel my pockets, if you like."
+
+"I will take your word!" Mannering said. "I was on my way to Portland
+Crescent, but I fancy that I have taken a wrong turn."
+
+"We can get there this way," the man answered. "Excuse me one second."
+
+He paused, and lit a cigarette. Then with his hands behind his back he
+stepped out by Mannering's side.
+
+"What was that you said just now?" he remarked, "that you were not aware
+of having an enemy in the world? My dear sir, there was never a more
+extraordinary delusion. I should seriously doubt whether in the whole
+of the United Kingdom there is a man who has more. I know myself of a
+million or so who would welcome the news of your death to-morrow. I
+know of a select few who have opened, and will open their newspapers
+to-morrow, and for the next few days, in the hope of seeing your obituary
+notice."
+
+A light commenced to break in upon Mannering. He looked towards his
+companion incredulously.
+
+"You mean political opponents!" he exclaimed. "Is that what you are
+driving at all the time?"
+
+The man laughed softly.
+
+"My friend," he said--"excuse me, Mr. Mannering--you remind me
+irresistibly of _Punch's_ cartoon last week--the ostrich politician with
+his head in the sand. You have thrust yours very deep down indeed, when
+you talk of political opponents. Do you know what they call you in the
+North, sir?"
+
+"No!"
+
+"The enemy of the people! It isn't a pleasant title, is it?"
+
+"It is a false one!" Mannering declared, with a little note of passion
+quivering in his tone.
+
+"It is as true and certain as the judgment of God!" his companion
+answered, with almost lightning-like rapidity.
+
+There was a moment's silence. They passed a lamp-post, and Mannering,
+turning his head, scrutinized the other's features closely.
+
+"I should like to know who you are," he said, "and what your name is."
+
+"It is a reasonable curiosity," the man answered. "My name is Fardell,
+Richard Fardell, and I am a retired bookmaker."
+
+"A bookmaker!" Mannering repeated, incredulously.
+
+"Precisely. I should imagine from what I know of you, Mr. Mannering, that
+my occupation, or rather my late occupation, is not one which would
+appeal to you favourably. Very likely not! I don't see why it should
+myself. But at any rate, it taught me a lot about my fellow men. I did my
+business in shillings and half-crowns, you see. Did it with the working
+classes, the sort who used to go to a race-meeting for a jaunt, and just
+have a bit on for the sake of the sport. Took their missus generally, and
+made a holiday of it, and if they lost they'd grin and come and chaff me,
+and if they won they'd spend the money like lords. I made money, of
+course, bought houses, and made a lot more. Then business fell off. I
+didn't seem to meet with that cheerful holiday-making crew at any of the
+meetings up in the North, and I got sick of it. You see, I'd made sort
+of friends with them. They all knew Dicky Fardell, and I knew hundreds
+of 'em by sight. They'd come and mob me to stand 'em a drink when the
+wrong horse won, and I can tell you I never refused. They were always
+good-tempered, real sports to the backbone, and I tell you I was fond of
+'em. And then they left off coming. I couldn't understand it at first.
+The one or two who came talked of bad trade, and when I asked after their
+pals they shook their heads. They betted in shillings instead of
+half-crowns, and I didn't like the look of their faces when they lost.
+I tell you, it got so at last that I used to watch for the horse they'd
+put their bit on to win, and feel kind o' sick when it didn't. You can
+imagine I couldn't stand that sort of thing long. I chucked it, and I
+went to look for my pals. I wanted to find out what had become of them."
+
+Mannering looked at him curiously.
+
+"You found, I hope," he said, drily, "that the British workman had
+discovered a better investment for his shillings and half-crowns than the
+race-course."
+
+Mr. Richard Fardell smiled pleasantly, but tolerantly.
+
+"It's clear," he said, "that you, meaning no offence, Mr. Mannering, know
+nothing about the British workman. Whatever else he may be, he's a
+sportsman. He'll look after his wife and kids as well as the best of
+them, but he'll have his bit of sport so long as he's got a copper in his
+pocket. When he didn't come I put my kit on one side and went to look for
+him. I went, mind you, as his friend, and knowing a bit about him. And
+what I found has made a changed man of me."
+
+Mannering nodded.
+
+"I am afraid things are bad up in the North," he said. "You mustn't think
+that we people who are responsible for the laws of the country ignore
+this, Mr. Fardell. It is a very anxious time indeed with all of us.
+Still, I presume you study the monthly trade returns. Some industries
+seem prosperous enough."
+
+"I'm no politician," Fardell answered, curtly. "Figures don't interest
+me. They're just the drugs some of your party use to keep your conscience
+quiet. Things I see and know of are what I go by. And what I've seen, and
+what I know of, are just about enough to tear the heart out of any man
+who cares a row of pins about his fellows. Now I'm going to talk plain
+English to you, Mr. Mannering. I bought that little article you have in
+your pocket seriously meaning to knock you on the head with it. And that
+may come yet."
+
+Mannering looked at him in amazement.
+
+"But my dear sir," he said, "what is your grievance against me? I have
+always considered myself a people's politician."
+
+"Then the people may very well say 'save me from my friends'," Fardell
+answered, grimly. "Mind, I believe you're honest, or you'd be lying on
+your back now with a cracked skull. But you are using a great influence
+on the wrong side. You're standing between the people and the one
+reasonable scheme which has been brought forward which has a fair chance
+of changing their condition."
+
+Then Mannering began to understand.
+
+"I oppose the scheme you speak of," he answered, "simply because I don't
+believe in it. Every man has a right to his opinion. I don't believe for
+a moment that it would improve the present condition of things."
+
+"Then what is your scheme?" Fardell asked.
+
+"My scheme!" Mannering repeated. "I don't quite understand you!"
+
+"Of course you don't," Fardell answered, vigourously. "You can weave
+academic arguments, you can make figures and statistics dance to any
+damned tune you please. If I tried to argue with you, you'd squash me
+flat. And what's it all come to? My pals must starve for the
+gratification of your intellectual vanity. You won't listen to Tariff
+Reform. Then what do you propose, to light the forges and fill the
+mills? Nothing! I say, unless you've got a counter scheme of your own,
+you ought to try ours."
+
+"Come, Mr. Fardell," Mannering said, "I can assure you that all I have
+said and written is the outcome of honest thought. I--"
+
+"Stop!" Fardell exclaimed. "Honest thought! Yes! Where? In your study.
+That's where you theorists do your mischief. You can't make laws for the
+people in your study. You can't tell the status of the workingman from
+the figures you read in your study. You're like half the smug people in
+the world who discuss this question in the railway carriages and in their
+clubs. I've heard 'em till I'd like to shove their self-opinionated
+arguments down their throats, strip their clothes off their backs, and
+send them down to live with my pals, or starve with them. Any little
+idiot who buys a penny paper and who's doing pretty well for himself,
+thinks he can lay down the law about Free Trade. You're all of one
+kidney, sir! You none of you realize this. There are men as good as any
+of you, whose wives and children are as dear to them as yours to you,
+who've got to see them get thinner and thinner, who don't know where to
+get a day's work or lay their hands upon a copper, and all the while
+their kids come crying to them for something to eat. Put yourself in
+their place, sir, and try and realize the torture of it. I've been
+amongst 'em. I've spent half of what I made, and a good many thousands it
+was, buying food for them. Can you wonder that my fingers have itched for
+the throats of these smug, prosperous pigs, who spurt platitudes and
+think things are very well as they are because they're making their
+little bit? What right have you--any of you--to hesitate for a second to
+try any means to help those poor devils, unless you've got a better
+scheme of your own? Will you tell me that, sir?"
+
+They had reached Mannering's house, and he threw open the gate.
+
+"You must come in with me and talk about these things," Mannering said,
+gravely. "You seem to be the sort of person I've been wanting to meet for
+a long time."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV
+
+DEBTS OF HONOUR
+
+
+Berenice found the following morning a note from Borrowdean, which caused
+her some perplexity.
+
+ "If you really care," he said, "to do Mannering a good turn, look his
+ niece up now and then. I am afraid that young woman has rather lost her
+ head since she came to London, and she is making friends who will do
+ her no particular good."
+
+Berenice ordered her carriage early, and drove round to Portland
+Crescent.
+
+"My dear child," she exclaimed, as Clara came into the room, "what have
+you been doing with yourself? You look ghastly!"
+
+Clara shrugged her shoulders, and looked at herself in a mirror.
+
+"I do look chippy, don't I?" she remarked. "I've been spending the
+week-end down at Bristow."
+
+"At Bristow?" Berenice repeated. Her voice spoke volumes. Clara looked up
+a little defiantly.
+
+"Yes! We had an awful spree! I like it there immensely, only--"
+
+Berenice looked up.
+
+"I notice," she remarked, "that there is generally an 'only' about people
+who have spent week-ends at Bristow. They play cards there, don't they,
+until daylight? Some one once told me that they kept a professional
+croupier for roulette!"
+
+"That horrid game!" Clara exclaimed. "Please don't mention it. I've
+scarcely slept a wink all night for thinking of it."
+
+Berenice looked at her in surprise.
+
+"Do you mean to say," she inquired, deliberately, "that they allowed you
+to play--and lose?"
+
+"It wasn't their fault I lost," Clara answered. "Oh, what a fool I was.
+Bobby Bristow showed me a system. It seemed so easy. I didn't think I
+could possibly lose. It worked beautifully at first. I thought that I was
+going to pay all my bills, and have lots of money to spend. Then I
+doubled the stakes--I wanted to win a lot--and everything went wrong!"
+
+"How much did you lose?" Berenice asked. Clara shivered.
+
+"Don't ask me!" she cried. "Sir Leslie Borrowdean gave his own cheques
+for all my I.O.U.'s. He is coming to see me some time to-day. I don't
+know what I shall say to him."
+
+"Do you mean to go on playing?" Berenice asked, quietly, "or is this
+experience enough for you?"
+
+"I shall never sit at a roulette table again as long as I live," she
+declared. "I hate the very thought of it."
+
+"Then you can just ask Sir Leslie the amount of the I.O.U.'s, and tell
+him that he shall have a cheque in the morning," Berenice said. "I will
+lend you the money."
+
+Clara gave a little gasp.
+
+"You are too kind," she exclaimed, "but I don't know when I shall be able
+to repay you. It is--nearly three hundred pounds!"
+
+"So long as you keep your word," Berenice answered, "and do not play
+again, you need never let that trouble you. You shall have the cheque
+before two o'clock. No, please don't thank me. If you take my advice you
+won't spend another week-end at Bristow. It is not a fit house for young
+girls. How is your uncle?"
+
+"I haven't seen him this morning," Clara answered. "Perkins told me that
+he came home after midnight with a man whom he seemed to have picked up
+in the street, and they were in the study talking till nearly five this
+morning."
+
+Berenice rose.
+
+"I came to see if you would care to drive down to Ranelagh with me this
+morning," she said, "but you are evidently fit for nothing except to go
+back to bed again. I won't forget the cheque, and remember me to your
+uncle. By the bye, where's that nice young man who used to be always with
+you down in the country?"
+
+"You must mean Mr. Lindsay," Clara answered. "I have no idea. At Blakely,
+I suppose."
+
+"If I were you," Berenice said, as she rose, "I should write to him to
+come up and look after you. You need it!"
+
+She nodded pleasantly and took her leave. Clara threw herself into a
+chair and rang the bell.
+
+"Perkins," she said, "I have had no sleep and no breakfast. What should
+you recommend?"
+
+"An egg beaten up in milk, miss," the man suggested, "same as I've just
+taken Mr. Mannering."
+
+"Is my uncle up?" Clara asked.
+
+"Not yet, miss," the man answered; "He is just dressing."
+
+Clara nodded.
+
+"Very well. Please get me what you said, and if Sir Leslie Borrowdean
+calls I want to see him at once."
+
+"Sir Leslie is in the study now, miss," the man answered. "I showed him
+in there because I thought he would want to see Mr. Mannering, but he
+asked for you."
+
+"Will you say that I shall be there in three minutes," Clara said.
+
+The three minutes became rather a long quarter of an hour, but Clara had
+used the time well. When she entered the library she had changed her
+dress, rearranged her hair, and by some means or another had lost her
+unnatural pallor. Sir Leslie greeted her a little gravely,
+
+"Glad to see you looking so fit," he remarked. "They did us a bit too
+well down at Bristow, I thought. It's all very well for you children,"
+he continued, with a smile, "but when a man gets to my time of life he
+misses a night's rest."
+
+She smiled.
+
+"You don't call yourself old, Sir Leslie!" she remarked.
+
+"Well, I'm not young, although I like to think I am," he answered. "I'm
+afraid there's pretty nearly a generation between us, Miss Clara. By the
+bye, where's your uncle this morning?"
+
+"Getting up," she answered. "He did not go to bed until after five,
+Perkins tells me. He brought some one home with him from Dorchester's
+reception, or some one he picked up afterwards, and they seem to have sat
+up talking all night."
+
+Borrowdean was interested.
+
+"You have no idea who it was, I suppose?" he asked.
+
+She shook her head.
+
+"None at all. Perkins had never seen him before. When do you poor
+creatures get your holiday, Sir Leslie?"
+
+He smiled.
+
+"The session will be over in about three weeks," he answered, "unless we
+defeat the Government before then. Your uncle has been hitting them very
+hard lately. I think before long we shall be in office."
+
+"Politics," she said, "seems to be rather a greedy sort of business. You
+are always trying to turn the other side out, aren't you?"
+
+"You must remember," he answered, "that politics is rather a one-sided
+sort of affair. The party which is in makes a very comfortable living
+out of it, and we who are out have to scrape along as best we can. Rather
+hard upon people like your uncle and myself, who are, comparatively
+speaking, poor men. That reminds me," he said, bringing out his
+pocket-book, "I thought that I had better bring you these little
+documents."
+
+"Those horrid I.O.U.'s," she remarked.
+
+"Yes," he answered. "I am sorry that you were so unlucky. I bought these
+from the bank, Miss Clara, as I thought you would not feel comfortable if
+you had to leave Bristow owing this money to strangers."
+
+"It was very thoughtful of you," she murmured. He changed his seat and
+came over to her side on the sofa.
+
+"Have you any idea how much they come to?" he asked, smoothing them out
+upon his knee.
+
+"I am afraid to nearly three hundred pounds," she answered.
+
+He shook his head gravely.
+
+"I am sorry to say that they come to a good deal more than that," he
+said. "I hope you do not forget that I took the liberty of advising you
+more than once to stop. You had the most abominable luck."
+
+"More than three hundred?" she gasped. "How much more?"
+
+"They seem to add up to five hundred and eighty five pounds," he
+declared. "I must confess that I was surprised myself."
+
+"There--I think there must be some mistake," Clara faltered.
+
+He handed them to her.
+
+"You had better look them through," he said. "They seem all right."
+
+She took them in her hand, and looked at them helplessly. There was one
+there for fifty pounds which she tried in vain to remember--and how shaky
+her handwriting was. A sudden flood of recollection brought the colour
+into her cheeks. She remembered the long table, the men all smoking, the
+women most of them a little hard, a little too much in earnest--the soft
+click of the ball, the silent, sickening moments of suspense. Others had
+won or lost as much as she, but perhaps because she had been so much in
+earnest, her ill-luck had attracted some attention. She remembered Major
+Bristow's whispered offer, or rather suggestion, of help. Even now her
+cheeks burned at something in his tone or look.
+
+"I suppose it's all right," she said, dolefully, "only it's a lot more
+than I thought. I shall have three hundred pounds in the morning, but
+I've no idea where to get the rest."
+
+"You are sure about the three hundred?" Sir Leslie asked, quietly.
+
+"Quite."
+
+"Then I think that you had better let me lend you the rest, for the
+present," he suggested. "I am afraid your uncle would be rather annoyed
+to know that you had been gambling to such an extent. You may be able to
+think of some way of paying me back later on."
+
+She looked up at him hesitatingly. There was nothing in his manner which
+suggested in the least what Major Bristow had almost pronounced. She drew
+a little breath of relief. He was so much older, and after all, he was
+her uncle's friend.
+
+"Can you really spare it, Sir Leslie?" she asked. "I can't tell you how
+grateful I should be."
+
+He looked down at her with a faint smile.
+
+"I can spare it for the present," he answered. "Only if you see any
+chance of paying me back before long, do so."
+
+"You will pardon my interference," said an ominously quiet voice from the
+doorway, "but may I inquire into the nature of this transaction between
+you and my niece, Sir Leslie? Perhaps you had better explain it, Clara!"
+
+They both turned quickly round. Mannering was standing upon the
+threshold, the morning paper in his hand. Clara sank into a chair and
+covered her face with her hands. Sir Leslie shrugged his shoulders.
+
+He was congratulating himself upon the discretion with which he had
+conducted the interview. He had for a few moments entertained other
+ideas.
+
+"Perhaps you will allow me to explain--" he began.
+
+"I should prefer to hear my niece," Mannering answered, coldly.
+
+Clara looked up. She was pale and frightened, and she had hard work to
+choke down the sobs.
+
+"Sir Leslie was down at Bristow, where I was staying--this last
+week-end," she explained. "I lost a good deal of money there at roulette.
+He very kindly took up my I.O.U.'s for me, and was offering when you came
+in to let it stand for a little time."
+
+"What is the amount?" Mannering asked.
+
+Clara did not answer. Her head sank again. Her uncle repeated his
+inquiry. There was no note of anger in his tone. He might have been
+speaking of an altogether indifferent matter.
+
+"I am afraid I shall have to trouble you to tell me the exact amount," he
+said. "Perhaps, Borrowdean, you would be so good as to inform me, as my
+niece seems a little overcome."
+
+"The amount of the I.O.U.'s for which I gave my cheque," Borrowdean said,
+"was five hundred and eighty-seven pounds. I have the papers here."
+
+There was a dead silence for a moment or two. Clara looked up furtively,
+but she could learn nothing from her uncle's face. It was some time
+before he spoke. When at last he did, his voice was certainly a little
+lower and less distinct than usual.
+
+"Did I understand you to say--five hundred and eighty-seven pounds?"
+
+"That is the amount," Borrowdean admitted. "I trust that you do not
+consider my interference in any way officious, Mannering. I thought it
+best to settle the claims of perfect strangers against Miss Mannering."
+
+"May I ask," Mannering continued, "in whose house my niece was permitted
+to lose this sum?"
+
+"It was at the Bristows'," Clara answered.
+
+"And under whose chaperonage were you?" Mannering asked.
+
+"Lady Bristow's! She called for me here, and took me down last Friday."
+
+"Are these people who are generally accounted respectable?" Mannering
+asked.
+
+"I don't think that Bristow is much better or worse than half of our
+country houses," Borrowdean answered. "People who are at all in the swim
+must have excitement nowadays, you know. Bristow himself isn't very
+popular, but people go to the house."
+
+Mannering made no further remark.
+
+"If you will come into the study, Borrowdean," he said, "I will settle
+this matter with you."
+
+Borrowdean hesitated.
+
+"Your niece said something about having three hundred pounds," he
+remarked.
+
+Mannering glanced towards her.
+
+"I think," he said, "that that must be a mistake. My niece has no such
+sum at her command."
+
+Clara rose to her feet.
+
+"You may as well know everything," she said. "The Duchess of Lenchester
+came in and found me very unhappy this morning. I told her everything,
+and she offered to lend me the money. I told her then that it was only
+three hundred pounds. I thought that was all I owed."
+
+"Have you made any other confidants?" Mannering asked.
+
+"No!"
+
+"You will return the Duchess's cheque," Mannering said. "Borrowdean, will
+you come this way?"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V
+
+LOVE _versus_ POLITICS
+
+
+Berenice was a little annoyed. It was the hour before dressing for dinner
+which she always devoted to repose--the hour saved from the stress of the
+day which had helped towards keeping her the young woman she certainly
+was. Yet Borrowdean's message was too urgent to ignore. She suffered her
+maid to wrap some sort of loose gown about her, and received him in her
+own study.
+
+"My dear Sir Leslie," she said, a little reproachfully, "was this really
+necessary? You know that after half-past six I am practically a person
+not existing--until dinner time!"
+
+"I should not have ventured to intrude upon you," Borrowdean said,
+quickly, "if the circumstances had not been altogether exceptional.
+I know your habits too well. I have just come from Mannering."
+
+"From Mannering--yes!"
+
+"Duchess," Borrowdean said, "have you--forgive a blunt question--but have
+you any influence over him?"
+
+Berenice was silent for several moments.
+
+"You ask me rather a hard question," she said. "A few months ago I think
+that I should have said yes. To-day--I am not sure. What has happened?
+Is anything wrong with him?"
+
+"Nothing, except that he seems to have gone mad," Borrowdean said,
+bitterly. "I went to him to-day to get him to fix the dates for his
+meetings at Glasgow and Leeds. What do you think his answer was?"
+
+"Don't tell me that he wants to back out!" Berenice exclaimed. "Don't
+tell me that!"
+
+"Almost as bad! He told me quite coolly that he was not prepared finally
+to set out his views upon the question until he had completed a course of
+personal investigation in some of the Northern centres of trade, to which
+he had committed himself."
+
+Berenice looked bewildered.
+
+"But what on earth does he mean?" she exclaimed. "Surely he knows all
+that there is to be known. His mastery of statistics is something
+wonderful."
+
+"What he means no man save himself can even surmise," Borrowdean
+answered. "He told me that he had had information of a state of distress
+in some of our Northern towns--Newcastle and Hull he mentioned, and some
+of the Lancashire places--which had simply appalled him. He was
+determined to verify it personally, and to commit himself to nothing
+further until he had done so. And he even asked me if I could not find
+him a pair until the end of the session, so that he could get away at
+once. I was simply dumbfounded. A pair for Mannering!"
+
+Berenice rose to her feet. She walked up and down the little room
+restlessly.
+
+"Sir Leslie," she said at last, "I am not sure whether I have what you
+would call any influence over Mr. Mannering now or not. I might have had
+but for you!"
+
+"For me?" Borrowdean exclaimed.
+
+"Yes. It was you who told me of--of--that woman," she said, haughtily,
+but with the colour rising almost to her temples. "After that, of course
+things were different between us. We are scarcely upon such terms at
+present as would justify my interference."
+
+Borrowdean dropped his eyeglass, and swung it deliberately by its black
+ribbon. He looked steadily at Berenice, but his eyes seemed to travel
+past her.
+
+"My dear Duchess," he said, quietly, "the game of life is a great one to
+play, and we who would keep our hands upon the board must of necessity
+make sacrifices. It is your duty to disregard in this instance your
+feelings towards Mannering. You must consider only his feelings towards
+you. They are such, I believe, as to give you a hold over him. You must
+make use of that hold for the sake of a great cause."
+
+Berenice raised her eyebrows.
+
+"Indeed! You seem to forget, Sir Leslie, that my share in this game, as
+you call it, must always be a passive one. I have no office to gain, no
+rewards to reap. Why should I commit myself to an unpleasant task for the
+sake of you and your friends?"
+
+"It is your party," he protested. "Your party as much as ours."
+
+"Granted," she answered. "Yet who are the responsible members of it? You
+know my opinion of Mannering as a politician. I would sooner follow him
+blindfold than all the others with my eyes open. Whatever he may lack, he
+is the most honest and right-seeing politician who ever entered the
+House."
+
+"He lacks but one thing," Borrowdean said, "the mechanical adjustment
+of the born politician to party matters. There was never a time when
+absolute unity and absolute force were so necessary. If he is going to
+play the intelligent inquirer, if he falters for one moment in his
+wholesale condemnation of this scheme, he loses the day for himself and
+for us. The one thing which the political public never forgives is
+the man who stops to think."
+
+"What do you want me to do?" Berenice asked.
+
+"To go to him and find out what he means, what influences have been at
+work, what is underneath it all. Warn him of the danger of even appearing
+doubtful, or for a moment lukewarm. The one person whom the public will
+not have in politics is the trifler. Think how many there have been,
+brilliant men, too, who have lost their places through a single false
+step, a single year, a month of dilettantism. Remind him of them. The man
+who moves in a great cause may move slowly, if you will, but he must move
+all the time. Remind him, too, that he is risking the one great chance of
+his life!"
+
+"He is to be Premier, then?" she asked.
+
+"Yes! There is no alternative!"
+
+"Very well, then," she said, "I will go. I make no promises, mind. I will
+listen to what he has to say. I will put our view of the situation before
+him. But I make no promises. It is possible, even, that I shall come to
+his point of view, whatever it may be."
+
+Borrowdean smiled.
+
+"I have no fear of that," he declared, "but at least it would be
+something to know what this point of view is. You will find him in a
+queer mood. That little fool of a niece of his has been getting in with
+a fast set, and making the money fly. You have heard of her last escapade
+at Bristow?"
+
+Berenice nodded.
+
+"Yes," she said. "I went there this morning directly I had your note.
+I feel rather self-reproachful about Clara Mannering. I meant to have
+looked after her more. She is rather an uninteresting young woman,
+though, and I am afraid I have let her drift away."
+
+"She will be all right with a little looking after," Borrowdean said.
+"Forgive me, but it is getting late."
+
+"I will go at once," she said.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Afterwards she wondered often at that strange, uncertain fluttering of
+the heart, the rush and glow of feelings warmer than any which had lately
+stirred her, which seemed in those first few minutes of their being
+together, to make an altered woman of her. Mannering, as he entered the
+room, pale and listless, was conscious at once of a foreign element in
+it, something which stirred his somewhat slow-beating pulse, too, which
+seemed to bring back to him a flood of delicious memories, the perfume of
+his rose-gardens at evening, the soft night music of his wind-stirred
+cedars. She had thrown aside her opera cloak. The delicate lines of her
+bust seemed to have expanded with the unusual rise and fall of her bosom.
+A faint rose-tint flush of streaming colour had stained the ivory
+whiteness of her skin--her eyes as they sought his were soft, almost
+liquid. They met so seldom alone--and she was alone now with him in the
+room which was so characteristically his own, a room with many
+indications of his constant presence, which one by one she had been
+realizing with curiously quickened pulses during the few minutes of
+waiting. On her way here, driving in an open victoria, through the soft
+summer evening, she had seemed to be pursued everywhere by a new world of
+sensuous suggestions. Of the many carriages which she had passed, hers
+alone seemed to savour of loneliness. She was the only beautiful woman
+who sat alone and companionless. In a momentary block she had seen a man
+in a neighbouring hansom slip his hand, a strong, brown, well-looking
+hand, under the apron, to hold for a moment the fingers of the woman who
+sat by his side--Berenice had caught the answering smile, she had seen
+him lean forward and whisper something which had brought a deeper flush
+into her own cheeks and a look into her eyes, half amused, half tender.
+These were rare moments with her, these moments of sentiment--perhaps for
+that reason all the more dangerous. She forgot almost the cause of her
+coming. She remembered only that she was alone with the one man whose
+voice had the power to thrill her, whose touch would call up into life
+the great hidden forces of her own passionate nature. The memory of all
+other things passed away from her like a cloud gone from the face of the
+sun. She leaned towards him. His face was full of wonder--wonder, and the
+coming joy.
+
+"Berenice!" he exclaimed.
+
+She let herself drift down the surging tide of this suddenly awakened
+passion. She held out her arms and pressed her lips on his as he caught
+her.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Presently she pushed him gently away--held him there at arm's length.
+
+"This is too absurd," she murmured, and drew him once more towards her
+with a choking little laugh. "I came for something quite different!"
+
+"What does it matter what you came for, so long as you stay," he
+answered. "Say that you came to bring a glimpse of paradise to a lonely
+man!"
+
+She disengaged herself, and her long white fingers strayed mechanically
+to her tumbled hair. The elegant precision of her toilette had given
+place to a most distracting disarray. She felt her cheeks burning still,
+and the lace at her bosom was all crushed.
+
+"And I was on my way to a dinner party," she whispered, with humorously
+uplifted eyebrows. "I must drive back home, and--and--"
+
+"And what?" he demanded.
+
+"And send an excuse," she declared, demurely. "I am not equal to a family
+dinner party."
+
+"And afterwards?"
+
+She smiled.
+
+"Would you like," she asked, "to take me out to dinner?"
+
+"Would I like!"
+
+"Go and change, and call for me in half an hour. We can go somewhere
+where we are not likely to be seen," she said, softly. "I must cover
+myself up in my cloak. Whatever will Perkins say? Please remember that
+I have no hat."
+
+He held her hands and looked into her eyes.
+
+"Don't go for one moment," he pleaded. "I want to realize it. I want to
+feel sure of you."
+
+The gravity of his manner was for a moment reflected in her tone.
+
+"I think," she said, "that you may feel sure. There are things which we
+may have to say to one another--presently--but--"
+
+He stooped and kissed her fingers.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI
+
+THE CONSCIENCE OF A STATESMAN
+
+
+He was shown into her own little boudoir by a smiling maid-servant, who
+seemed already to treat him with an especial consideration. The wonder of
+this thing was still lying like a thrall upon him, and yet he knew that
+the joy of life was burning once more in his veins. He caught sight of
+himself in a mirror, and he was amazed. The careworn look had gone from
+his eyes, the sallowness from his complexion. His step was elastic, he
+felt the firm, quick beat of his heart, even his pulses seem to throb to
+a new and a wonderful tune. These moments whilst he waited for her were a
+joy to him. The atmosphere was fragrant with the perfume of her favourite
+roses, a book lay upon the little inlaid table face downwards as she had
+left it. There was a delicately engraved etching upon the wall, which he
+recognized as her work; the watercolours, all of a French school which he
+had often praised, were of her choosing. Perfect though the room was in
+colouring and detail, there was yet a habitable, almost a homely, air
+about it. Mannering moved about amidst her treasures like a man in a
+dream, only it was a dream of loneliness gone forever, of a grey life
+suddenly coloured and transformed. It was wonderful.
+
+Then the soft swish of a skirt, and she came in. She had changed her
+gown. She wore white lace, with a string of pearls about her neck. He
+looked eagerly into her face, and a great relief took the place of that
+single instant of haunting fear. The change was still there. It was not
+the great lady who swept in, but the woman who has found an answer to
+the one question of life, a little tremulous still, a little less
+self-assured. She looked at him almost appealingly. A delicate tinge of
+colour lingered in her cheeks. He moved quickly forward to meet her.
+
+"Dear!" she murmured.
+
+He raised her hand to his lips. He was satisfied.
+
+"You see what my new-born vanity has led to," she declared, smilingly. "I
+have had to keep you waiting whilst I changed my gown. I hope you like me
+in white."
+
+"You are adorable," he declared.
+
+She laughed.
+
+"I wonder," she said, "would you mind dining here alone with me? It will
+be quite a scratch meal, but I thought that it would be cosier than a
+restaurant, and afterwards--we could come in here and talk."
+
+"I should like it better than anything in the world," he declared,
+truthfully.
+
+"You may take me in, then," she said. "I hope that you are as hungry as
+I am. No, not that way. I have ordered dinner to be served in the little
+room where I dine when I am alone."
+
+To Mannering there seemed something almost unreal about the chaste
+perfection of the meal and its wonderful service. They dined at a small
+round table, so small that more than once their fingers touched upon the
+tablecloth. A single servant waited upon them, swiftly and perfectly. The
+butler appeared only with the wine, which he served, and quietly
+withdrew. Across the tangled mass of flowers, only a few feet away all
+the time, sat the woman who had suddenly made the world so beautiful to
+him. A murmur of conversation continually flowed between them, but he was
+never very sure what they were talking about. He wanted to sit still, to
+feast his eyes, all his senses, upon her, to strive to realize this new
+thing, that from henceforth she was his! And then suddenly she broke the
+spell. She leaned back in her chair and laughed softly.
+
+"I have just remembered," she said, in response to his inquiring look,
+"why I came to call upon you this evening. What a long time ago it
+seems."
+
+He smiled.
+
+"And I never thought to ask you," he remarked.
+
+"We must have no secrets now," she said, with a delightful smile. "Leslie
+Borrowdean came to see me this afternoon, and he was very anxious about
+you. He declared that you wanted to postpone your great meetings in the
+North until after you had made some independent investigations in some of
+the manufacturing centres. Poor Sir Leslie! You had frightened him so
+completely that he was scarcely coherent."
+
+Mannering smiled a little gravely. It was like coming back to earth.
+
+"Politics with Borrowdean are so much a matter of pounds, shillings and
+pence that the bare idea of his finding himself a day further away from
+office frightens him to death," he said. "We are all like the pawns, to
+be moved about the chessboard of his life."
+
+Berenice smiled.
+
+"He is certainly a very self-centred person," she remarked; "but do
+you know, I am really a little curious to know how you succeeded in
+frightening him so thoroughly."
+
+"I had a fright myself," Mannering said. "I was made to feel for an hour
+or so like a Rip van Winkle with the cobwebs hanging about me--Rip van
+Winkle looking out upon a new world!"
+
+"You a Rip van Winkle!" she laughed. "What was it that man who wrote in
+the _Nineteenth Century_ called you last week? 'The most precise and
+far-seeing of our politicians.'"
+
+"The men who write in reviews," he murmured, "sometimes display the most
+appalling ignorance. There was also some one in the _Saturday Review_ who
+alluded to me last week as a library politician. My friend quoted that
+against me. 'A man who essays to govern a people he knows nothing of.' It
+was one of the labour party who wrote it, I know, but it sticks."
+
+"You are not losing confidence in yourself, surely?" she remarked,
+smiling.
+
+"My views are unchanged, if that is what you mean," he answered. "I
+believe I know what is good for the people, and when I am sure of it I
+shall not be afraid to take up the gauntlet. But I must be quite sure."
+
+"You puzzle me a little," she admitted. "Has any one written more
+convincingly than you? Arguments which are founded upon logic and
+statistics must yield truth, and you have set it down in black and
+white."
+
+"On the other hand," he said, "my unlearned but eloquent friend dismissed
+all statistics, all the science of argument and deduction, with the wave
+of a not too scrupulously clean hand. 'Figures,' he said, 'are dead
+things. They are the playthings of the charlatan politician, who, by a
+sort of mental sleight of hand, can make them perform the most wonderful
+antics. If you desire the truth, seek it from live things. If you desire
+really to call yourself the champion of the people, come and see for
+yourself how they are faring. Figures will not feed them, nor statistics
+keep them from the great despair. Come and let me show you the sinews of
+the country, whether they are sound or rotten. You cannot see them
+through your library walls. It is only the echo of their voice which you
+hear so far off. If you would really be the people's man, come and learn
+something of the people from their own lips.' This is what my friend said
+to me."
+
+"And who," she asked, "was this prophet who came to you and talked like
+this?"
+
+"A retired bookmaker," he answered. "I will tell you of our meeting."
+
+She listened gravely. After he had finished there was a short silence.
+The dessert was on the table, and they were alone. Berenice was looking
+thoughtful.
+
+"Tell me," he begged, "exactly what that wrinkled forehead means?"
+
+"I was wondering," she said, "whether Sir Leslie was right, when he said
+that you had too much conscience ever to be a great politician."
+
+"It mirrors Borrowdean's outlook upon politics precisely," he remarked.
+
+She smiled at him with a sudden radiance. She had risen to her feet, and
+with a quick, graceful movement leaned over him. This new womanliness
+which he had found so irresistible was alight once more in her face. Her
+eyes sought his fondly, she touched his lips with hers. The perfume of
+her clothes, the touch of her hair upon his cheek, were like a drug. He
+had no more words.
+
+"You may have one peach and one glass of the Prince's Burgundy, and then
+you must come and look for me," she said. "We have wasted too much time
+talking of other things. You haven't even told me yet what I have a right
+to hear, you know. I want to be told that you care for me better than
+anything else in the world."
+
+He caught her hands. There was a rare passion vibrating in his tone.
+
+"You do not doubt it, Berenice?"
+
+"Perhaps not," she answered, "but I want to be told. I am a middle-aged
+woman, you know, Lawrence, but I want to be made love to as though I were
+a silly girl! Isn't that foolish? But you must do it," she whispered,
+with her lips very close to his.
+
+He drew her into his arms.
+
+"I am not at all sure," he said, "that I have enough courage to make love
+to a Duchess!"
+
+"Then you can remember only that I am a woman," she whispered, "very,
+very, very much a woman, and--I'm afraid--a woman shockingly in love!"
+
+She disengaged herself suddenly, and was at the door before he could
+reach it. She looked back. Her cheeks were flushed. There was even a
+faint tinge of pink underneath the creamy white of her slender, stately
+neck.
+
+"Don't dare," she said, "to be more than five minutes!"
+
+Mannering poured himself out a glass of wine, and sat quite still with
+his head between his hands. He wanted to realize this thing if he could.
+The grinding of the great wheels fell no more upon his ears. He looked
+into a new world, so different from the old that he was almost afraid.
+
+And in her room, Berenice waited for him impatiently.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII
+
+A BLOW FOR BORROWDEAN
+
+
+There was a somewhat unusual alertness in Borrowdean's manner as he
+passed out from the little house in Sloane Gardens and summoned a passing
+hansom. He drove to the corner of Hyde Park, and dismissing the cab
+strolled along the broad walk.
+
+The many acquaintances whom he passed and repassed he greeted with a
+certain amount of abstraction. All the time he kept his eyes upon the
+road. He was waiting to catch sight of some familiar liveries. When at
+last they came he contrived to stop the carriage and hastily threaded his
+way to the side of the barouche.
+
+Berenice was looking radiantly beautiful. The exquisite simplicity of her
+white muslin gown and large hat of black feathers, the slight flush with
+which she received him, as though she carried about with her a secret
+which she expected every one to read, the extinction of that air of
+listlessness which had robbed her for some time of a certain share of her
+good looks--of all these things Borrowdean made quick note. His face grew
+graver as he accepted her not very enthusiastic invitation and occupied
+the back seat of the carriage. For the first time he admitted to himself
+the possibility of failure in his carefully laid plans. He recognized the
+fact, that there were forces at work against which he had no weapon
+ready. He had believed that Berenice was attracted by Mannering's
+personality and genius. He had never seriously considered the question of
+her feelings becoming more deeply involved. So many men had paid vain
+court to her. She had a wonderful reputation for inaccessibility. And yet
+he remembered her manner when he had paid his first unexpected visit to
+Blakely. It should have been a lesson to him. How far had the mischief
+gone, he wondered!
+
+"So Mannering has gone North," he remarked, noticing that she avoided the
+subject.
+
+She nodded. Her parasol drooped a little his way, and he wondered whether
+it was because she desired her face hidden.
+
+"You saw him?"
+
+"Yes," she answered. "He explained how he felt to me."
+
+"And you could not dissuade him?"
+
+"I did not try," she answered, simply. "Lawrence Mannering is not a man
+of ordinary disposition, you know. He had come to the conclusion that it
+was right for him to go, and opposition would only have made him the more
+determined. I cannot see that there is any harm likely to come of it."
+
+"I am not so sure of that," Borrowdean answered, seriously. "Mannering is
+_au fond_ a man of sentiment. There is no clearer thinker or speaker when
+his judgment is unbiassed, but on the other hand, the man's nature is
+sensitive and complex. He has a sort of maudlin self-consciousness which
+is as dangerous a thing as the nonconformist conscience. Heaven knows
+into whose hands he may fall up there."
+
+"He is going incognito," she remarked.
+
+"He is not the sort of man to escape notice," Borrowdean answered. "He
+will be discovered for certain. Of course, if it comes off all right, the
+whole thing will be a feather in his cap. But when I think how much we
+are dependent upon him, I don't like the risk."
+
+"You are sure," she remarked, thoughtfully, "that you do not over-rate--"
+
+"Mannering himself, perhaps," Borrowdean interrupted. "There is no man
+whose personal place cannot be filled. But one thing is very certain.
+Mannering is the only man who unites both sides of our scattered party,
+the only man under whom Fergusson and Johns would both serve. You know
+quite well the curse which has rested upon us. We have become a party of
+units, and our whole effectiveness is destroyed. We want welding into one
+entity. A single session, a single year of office, and the thing would be
+done. We who do the mechanical work would see that there was no breaking
+away again. But we must have that year, we must have Mannering. That is
+why I watch him like a child, and I must say that he has given me a good
+deal of anxiety lately."
+
+"In what way?" she asked.
+
+Borrowdean hesitated. He seemed uncertain how to answer.
+
+"If I explain what I mean," he said, "you will understand that I do not
+speak to you as a woman and an acquaintance of Mannering's, but simply as
+one of ourselves. Mannering's private life is, of course, interesting to
+me only as an index to his political destiny, and my acquaintance with it
+arises solely from my political interest in him. There are things in
+connection with it which I feel that I shall never properly be able to
+understand."
+
+She looked at him steadily. Her cheeks were a little whiter, but her tone
+was deliberate.
+
+"I do not wish to hear anything about Mr. Mannering's private life," she
+said. "You will understand that I am not free or disposed to listen when
+I tell you that I am going to marry him."
+
+This was perhaps the worst blow Borrowdean had ever experienced in the
+course of his whole life. The possibility of this was a danger which he
+had recognized might some time have to be reckoned with, but for the
+present he had felt safe enough. He was taken so completely aback that
+for a few moments his mind was a blank. He remained silent.
+
+"You do not offer me the conventional wishes," she remarked, presently.
+
+"They go--from me to you--as a matter of course," he answered. "To tell
+you the truth, I never thought of Mannering, for many reasons, as a
+marrying man."
+
+"You will have to readjust your views of him," she said, quietly, "for
+I think that we shall be married very soon."
+
+Borrowdean was a little white, and his teeth had come together. Whatever
+happened, he told himself, fiercely, this must never be. He felt his
+breast-pocket mechanically. Yes, the letter was there. Dare he risk it?
+She was a proud woman, she would be unforgiving if once she believed. But
+supposing she found him out? He temporized.
+
+"Thank you for telling me," he said. "Do you mind putting me down here?"
+
+"Why? You seemed in no hurry a few minutes ago."
+
+"The world," he said, "was a different place then."
+
+She looked at him searchingly.
+
+"You had better tell me all about it," she remarked. "You have something
+on your mind, something which you are half disposed to tell me, a little
+more than half, I think. Go on."
+
+He looked at her as one might look at the magician who has achieved the
+apparently impossible.
+
+"You are wonderful," he said. "Yes, I will tell you my dilemma, if you
+like. I have just come from Sloane Gardens!"
+
+Her face changed instantly. It was as though a mask had been dropped over
+it. Her eyes were fixed, her features expressionless.
+
+"Well?" she said, simply.
+
+He drew a letter from his pocket.
+
+"You may as well see it yourself," he remarked. "For reasons which you
+may doubtless understand, I have always kept on good terms with Mrs.
+Phillimore, and she was to have dined with me and some other friends
+to-morrow night. Here is a note which I had from her yesterday. Will you
+read it?"
+
+Berenice held it between her finger tips. There were only a few lines,
+and she read them at a glance.
+
+ Sloane Gardens,
+ _Tuesday_.
+
+ My dear Sir Leslie,
+
+ I am so sorry, but I must scratch for to-morrow night. L. is going
+ North on some mysterious expedition, and I am afraid that he will want
+ me to go with him. In fact, he has already said so. Ask me again some
+ time, won't you?
+
+ Yours ever,
+ Blanche Phillimore.
+
+Berenice folded up the letter and returned it.
+
+"It is a little extraordinary," she remarked. "I am much obliged to you
+for showing me this. If you do not mind, we will talk of something else.
+Look, there is Clara Mannering alone under the trees. Go and talk to
+her."
+
+Berenice touched the checkstring, and Borrowdean was forced to depart.
+She smiled upon him graciously enough, but she spoke not another word
+about Mannering. Borrowdean was obliged to leave her without knowing
+whether he had lost or gained the trick.
+
+Clara Mannering received him not altogether graciously. As a matter of
+fact, she was looking for some one else. They strolled along, talking
+almost in monosyllables. Borrowdean found time to notice the change which
+even these few months in London had wrought in her. She was still
+graceful in her movements, but a smart dressmaker had contrived to make
+her a perfect reproduction of the recognized type of the moment. She had
+lost her delicate colouring. There was a certain hardness in her young
+face, a certain pallor and listlessness in her movements which Borrowdean
+did not fail to note. He tried to lead the conversation into more
+personal channels.
+
+"We seem to have met very little during the last month," he said. "I have
+scarcely had an opportunity to ask you whether you find the life here as
+pleasant as you hoped, whether it has realized your expectations."
+
+"Does anything ever do that?" she asked, a little flippantly. "It is
+different, of course. I do not think that I should be willing to go back
+to Blakely, at any rate."
+
+"You have made a great many friends," he remarked. "I hear of you
+continually."
+
+"A host of acquaintances," she remarked. "I do not think that I have
+materially increased the circle of my friends. I hear of you too, Sir
+Leslie, very often. It seems that people give you a good deal of credit
+for inducing my uncle to come back into politics."
+
+"I certainly did my best to persuade him," Sir Leslie answered, smoothly.
+"If I had known how much anxiety he was going to cause us I might perhaps
+have been a little less keen."
+
+"Anxiety!" she repeated.
+
+"Yes! Do you know where he is now?"
+
+"I have no idea," Clara answered. "All that I do know is that he has gone
+away for three weeks, and that I am going to stay with the Duchess till
+he comes back. It is very nice of her, and all that, of course, but I
+feel rather as though I were going into prison. The Duchess isn't exactly
+the modern sort of chaperon."
+
+Borrowdean nodded sympathetically.
+
+"And consider my anxiety," he remarked. "Your uncle has gone North to
+consider the true position of the labouring classes. Now Mr. Mannering is
+a brilliant politician and a sound thinker, but he is also a man of
+sentiment. They will drug him with it up there. He will probably come
+back with half a dozen new schemes, and we don't want them, you know. He
+ought to be speaking at Glasgow and Leeds this week. He simply ignores
+his responsibilities. He yields to a sudden whim and leaves us _plantes
+la_."
+
+She seemed scarcely to have heard the conclusion of his sentence. Her
+attention was fixed upon a group of men who were talking near.
+
+"Do you know--isn't that Major Bristow?" she asked Borrowdean, abruptly.
+
+Borrowdean put up his glass.
+
+"Looks like him," he admitted.
+
+"I should be so much obliged," she said, "if you would tell him that
+I wish to see him. I have a message for his sister," she concluded,
+a little lamely.
+
+Borrowdean did as he was asked. He noticed the slight impatience of the
+man as he delivered his message, and the flush with which she greeted
+him. Then, with a little shrug of the shoulders, he pursued his way.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII
+
+A PAGE FROM THE PAST
+
+
+She swept into the room, humming a light opera tune, bringing with her
+the usual flood of perfumes, suggestion of cosmetics, a vivid apparition
+of the artificial. Her skirts rustled aggressively, her voice was just
+one degree too loud. Mannering rose to his feet a little wearily.
+
+She looked at him with raised eyebrows.
+
+"Heavens!" she exclaimed. "What have you been doing with yourself,
+Lawrence? You look like a ghost!"
+
+"I am quite well," he answered, calmly.
+
+"Then you don't look it," she answered, bluntly. "Where have you been for
+the last few weeks?"
+
+"Up in the North," he answered. "It was very hot, and I had a great deal
+to do. I suppose I am suffering, like the rest of us, from a little
+overwork."
+
+She spread herself out in a chair opposite to him.
+
+"Don't stand," she said; "you fidget me. I have something to say to you."
+
+"So I gathered from your note," he remarked.
+
+"You haven't hurried."
+
+"I only got back to London last night," he answered. "I could scarcely
+come sooner, could I?"
+
+"I suppose not," she admitted.
+
+Then for a moment or two she was silent. She was watching him a little
+curiously.
+
+"Is this true?" she asked, "this rumour?"
+
+"Won't you be a little more explicit?" he begged.
+
+"They say that you are going to marry the Duchess of Lenchester!"
+
+"It is true," he answered.
+
+She leaned forward. Her clasped hands rested upon her knee. She seemed to
+be examining the tip of her patent shoe. Suddenly she looked up at him.
+
+"You ought to have come and told me yourself!" she said.
+
+"I had no opportunity," he reminded her. "I left London the morning
+after--it happened--and I returned last night."
+
+"Political business?" she asked.
+
+"Entirely."
+
+"Lawrence," she said, "I don't like it."
+
+"Why not?" he asked. "Has mine been such a successful life, do you think,
+that you need grudge me a little happiness towards its close?"
+
+"Bosh!" she answered. "You are only forty-six. You are a young man
+still."
+
+"I had forgotten my years," he declared. "I only know that I am tired."
+
+"You look it," she remarked. "I must say that there is very little of the
+triumphant suitor about you. You work too hard, Lawrence."
+
+"If I do," he asked, with a note of fierceness in his tone, "whose fault
+is it? I was almost happy at Blakely. I had almost learned to forget. It
+was you who dragged me out again. You were not satisfied with half of my
+income; you were always in debt, always wanting more money. Then
+Borrowdean made use of you. He wanted me back into politics, you wanted
+more money for your follies and extravagances. Back I had to come into
+harness. Blanche, I've tried to do my duty to you, but there is a limit.
+I owed you a comfortable place in life, and I have tried to see that you
+have it. I have never refused anything you have asked me, I have never
+mentioned the sacrifices which I have been forced to make. But there is
+a limit. I draw it here. I will not suffer any interference between the
+Duchess of Lenchester and myself!"
+
+Blanche Phillimore rose slowly to her feet. He was used to her fits of
+passion, but there was no sign of anything of the sort in her face. She
+was agitated, but in some new way. Her words were an attack, but her
+manner suggested rather an appeal. Her large, fine eyes, her one
+perfectly natural feature, were soft and luminous. They seemed somehow to
+transfigure her face. To him it seemed like the foolish, handsome woman
+of fifteen years ago who had suddenly come to life again.
+
+"You owed me--a comfortable place in life, Lawrence! Thank--you. You have
+paid the debt very well. You owed me--a respectable guardianship; you
+paid that, too. Thank you again. Now tell me, do you owe me nothing
+else?"
+
+"I owed you one debt," he said, gravely, "which neither I nor any other
+man who incurs it can ever discharge."
+
+"I am glad you realize it," she answered. "But have you ever tried to
+discharge it? You have given me a home and money to throw away on any
+folly which could kill thought. What about the rest?"
+
+"Blanche," he said, gravely, "the rest was impossible! You know that as
+well as I do."
+
+"It is fifteen years ago, Lawrence," she said, "and all that time we have
+fenced with our words. Now I am going to speak a little more plainly. You
+robbed me of my husband. The fault may not have been wholly yours, but
+the fact remains. You struck him, and he died. I was left alone!"
+
+Mannering's face was ashen. The whole horrible scene was rising up again
+before him. He covered his face with his hands. It was more distinct than
+ever. He saw the man's flushed face, heard his stream of abuse, felt the
+sting of his blow, the hot anger with which he had struck back. Then
+those few awful moments of suspense, the moment afterwards when they had
+looked at one another. He shivered! Why had she let loose this flood of
+memories? She was speaking to him again.
+
+"I was left alone," she repeated, quietly, "and I have been alone ever
+since. You don't know much about women, Lawrence. You never did! Try and
+realize, though, what that must mean to a woman like myself, not strong,
+not clever, with very few resources--just a woman. I cared for my
+husband, I suppose, in an average sort of way. At any rate he loved me.
+Then--there was you. Oh, you never made love to me, of course. You were
+not the sort of man to make love to another man's wife. But you used to
+show that you liked to be with me, Lawrence. Your voice and your eyes and
+your whole manner used to tell me that. Then there came--that hideous
+day! I lost you both. What have I had since, Lawrence?"
+
+"Very little, I am afraid, worth having."
+
+"'Very little--worth having'!" She flung the words from her with
+passionate scorn. "I had your alms, your cold, hurried visits, when you
+seemed to shiver if our fingers touched. It would have seemed to you, I
+suppose, a terrible sin to have touched the lips of the woman whom you
+had helped to rob of her husband, to have spoken kindly to her, to have
+given her at least a little affection to warm her heart. Poor me! What a
+hell you made of my days, with your selfish model life, your panderings
+to conscience. I didn't want much, you know, Lawrence," she said, with a
+sudden choking in her voice. "I would never have robbed you of your peace
+of mind. All I wanted was kindness. And I think, Lawrence, that it was a
+debt, but you never paid it."
+
+Mannering had a moment of self-revelation, a terrible, lurid moment.
+Every word that she had said was true.
+
+"You have never spoken to me like this before," he reminded her,
+desperately. "I never knew that you cared."
+
+"Don't lie!" she answered, calmly. "You turned your head away that you
+might not see. In your heart you knew very well. What else, do you think,
+made me, a very ordinary, nervous sort of woman, get you out of the house
+that day, tell my story, the story that shielded you, without faltering,
+put even the words into your own mouth? It was because I was fool enough
+to care! And oh, my God, how you have tortured me since! You would sit
+there, coldly censorious, and reason with me about my friends, my manner
+of life. I knew what you thought. You didn't hide it very well. Lawrence,
+I wonder I didn't kill you!"
+
+"I wish that you had," he said, bitterly.
+
+She nodded.
+
+"Oh, I know how you are feeling just now," she said. "Truth strikes home,
+you know, and it hurts just a little, doesn't it? In a few days your
+admirable common sense will prevail. You will say to yourself: 'She was
+that sort of woman, she had that sort of disposition, she was bound to
+go to the dogs, anyway!' So you are going to marry the Duchess of
+Lenchester, Lawrence!"
+
+He stood up.
+
+"Blanche," he said, "that was all a mistake. I didn't understand. Let us
+forget that day altogether. Marry me now, and I will try to make up for
+these past years."
+
+She stared at him blankly. The colour in her cheek was like a lurid patch
+under the pallor of her skin. She gave a little gasp, and her hand went
+to her side. Then she laughed hardly, almost offensively.
+
+"What a man of sentiment," she declared. "After fifteen years, too, and
+only just engaged to another woman! No, thank you, my dear Lawrence. I've
+lived my life, such as it has been. I'm not so very old, but I look
+fifty, and I've vices enough to blacken an entire neighbourhood. Fancy,
+if people saw me, and heard that you might have married the Duchess of
+Lenchester. They'd hint at an asylum."
+
+"Never mind about other people," he said. "Give me a chance, Blanche, to
+show that I'm not such an absolute brute."
+
+"Rubbish," she interrupted. "Fifteen years ago I would have married you.
+In fact, I expected to. The reason why I found the courage to shield you
+from any unpleasantness that awful day was because I knew if trouble came
+and there was any scandal you would feel yourself obliged to marry me,
+and I wanted you to marry me--because you wanted to. What an idiot I was!
+Now, please go away, Lawrence. Marry the Duchess, if you like, but don't
+worry me with your re-awakened conscience. I'm going my own way for the
+rest of my few years, and the less I see of you the better I shall be
+pleased. You will forgive me--but I have an engagement--down the river!
+I really must hurry you off."
+
+Her teeth were set close together, the sobs seemed tangled in her throat.
+It seemed to her that all the longing in her life was concentrated in
+that one passionate desire, that he should seize her in his arms now,
+hold her there--tell her that it had all been a mistake, that the ugly
+times were dreams, that after all he had cared--a little! The room swam
+round with her, but she pointed smilingly to the door, which her trim
+parlour-maid was holding open. And Mannering went.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX
+
+THE FALTERING OF MANNERING
+
+
+Mannering left by the afternoon train for Hampshire, where he was to be
+the guest for a few days of the leader of his party. He arrived without
+sending word of his coming, to find the whole of the house party absent
+at a cricket match. The short respite was altogether welcome to him. He
+changed his clothes and wandered off into the gardens. Here an hour or so
+later Berenice's maid found him.
+
+"Her Grace would like to see you, sir, if you would come to her
+sitting-room," the girl said, with a demure smile.
+
+Mannering, with something of an inward groan, followed her. Berenice,
+very slim and stately in her simple white muslin gown, rose from the
+couch as he entered, and held out her hands.
+
+"At last," she murmured. "You provoking man, to stay away so long. And
+what have you been doing with yourself?"
+
+Her sentence concluded with a little note of dismay. Mannering was
+positively haggard in the clear afternoon light. There were lines
+underneath his eyes, and his face had a tense, drawn appearance. He did
+not kiss her, as she had more than half expected. He held her hands for
+a moment, and then sank down upon the couch by her side.
+
+"It was not exactly easy work--up there," he said.
+
+She noticed the repression.
+
+"Tell me all about it," she begged.
+
+His thoughts surged back to those three weeks of tragedy. His personal
+misery became for the moment a shadowy thing. The sorrows of one man,
+what were they to the breaking hearts of millions? He thought of the
+children, and he shuddered.
+
+"It isn't so much to tell," he said. "I have been to a dozen or so of the
+largest towns in the North, and have taken the manufacturers one by one.
+I have taken their wage sheets and compared them with past years. The
+result was always the same. Less money distributed amongst more people.
+Afterwards we went amongst the people themselves--to see how they lived.
+It was like a chapter from the inferno--an epic of loathsome tragedy. I
+have seen the children, Berenice, and God help the next generation."
+
+"You must not forget, Lawrence," she said, "that character is an
+essential factor in poverty. Poverty there must always be, because of
+the idle and shiftless."
+
+"Individual poverty, yes," he answered. "Not wholesale poverty, not
+streets of it, towns of it. I don't talk about starving people, although
+I saw them too. Our vicious charitable system may keep their cry from our
+ears, but my sympathies go out to the man who ought to be earning two
+pounds a week, and who is earning fifteen shillings; the man who used to
+have his bit of garden, and smoke, and Sunday clothes, and a day or so's
+holiday now and then. He was a contented, decent, God-fearing citizen,
+the backbone of the whole nation, and he has been blotted away from the
+face of the earth. They work now passively, like dumb brutes, to resist
+starvation, and human character isn't strong enough for such a strain.
+The public houses thrive, and the pawnshops are full. But the children
+haven't enough to eat. They are growing up lank, white, prematurely aged,
+the spectres to dance us statesmen down into hell."
+
+"You are overwrought, dear," she said, gently. "You have been in the
+hands of a man whose object it was to show you only one side of all
+this."
+
+"I have sought for the truth," Mannering answered, "and I have seen it. I
+have learned more in three weeks than all the Commissions and statistics
+and Board-of-Trade figures have taught me in five years."
+
+"And yet," she said, thoughtfully, "you hesitated about that last Navy
+vote. Don't you see that the imperialism which you are a little disposed
+to shrug your shoulders at is the most logical and complete cure for all
+this? We must extend and maintain our colonies, and people them with our
+surplus population."
+
+He shook his head.
+
+"That is not a policy which would ever appeal to me," he answered. "It
+is like an external operation to remove a malady which is of internal
+origin. Either our social laws or our political systems are at fault
+when our trade leaves us, and our labouring classes are unable to earn
+a fair wage. That is the position we are in to-day."
+
+She rose to her feet, and walked restlessly up and down the room.
+Mannering had the look of a crushed man. She watched him critically.
+Writers in magazines and reviews had often made a study of his character.
+She remembered a brilliant contributor to a recent review, who had dwelt
+upon a certain lack of cohesion in his constitution, an inability to
+relegate sentiment to its proper place in dealing with the great workaday
+problems of the world. Conscientious, but never to be trusted, was the
+last anomalous but luminous criticism. Was this frame of mind of his a
+sign of it, she wondered? His place in politics was fixed and sure. What
+right had he, as a man of principle, with a great following, to run even
+the risk of being led away by false prophets? A certain hardness stole
+into her face as she watched him. She tried to steel herself against the
+sight of his suffering, and though she was not wholly successful, there
+was a distinct change in her tone and attitude towards him as she resumed
+her seat.
+
+"Tell me," she asked, "what this means from a practical point of view?
+How will it effect your plans?"
+
+"I must give up my public meetings," he answered, slowly. "I have written
+to Manningham to tell him that he must get some one else to lead the
+campaign."
+
+Berenice was very pale. So many of these wonderful dreams of hers seemed
+vanishing into thin air.
+
+"This is a terrible blow," she said. "It is the worst thing which
+has happened to us for years. Are you going over to the other side,
+Lawrence?"
+
+He shook his head.
+
+"I can't do that altogether," he said. "The position is simply this: I am
+still, so far as my judgment and research go, opposed to tariff reform.
+On the other hand, I dare not take any leading part in fighting any
+scheme which has the barest chance of bringing better times to the
+working classes. I simply stand apart for the moment on this question."
+
+She laughed a little bitterly.
+
+"There is no other question," she said. "You will never be allowed to
+remain neutral. You appear to me to be in a very singular position. You
+are divided between sentiment and conviction, and you prefer to yield to
+the former. Lawrence, do not be hasty! Think of all that depends upon
+your judgment in this matter. From the very first you have been the
+bitterest and most formidable opponent of this absurd scheme. If you turn
+round you will unsettle public opinion throughout the country. Remember,
+the power of the statesman is almost a sacred charge."
+
+"I am remembering," he murmured, "those children. I am bound to think
+this matter out, Berenice. I am going to meet Graham and Mellors next
+week. I shall not rest until I have made some effort to put my hand upon
+the weak spot. Somewhere there is a rotten place. I want to reach it."
+
+"Do you mean to give up your seat?" she asked.
+
+"Not unless I am asked to," he answered. "I may need to work from there."
+
+She sighed.
+
+"I suppose your mind is quite made up," she said.
+
+"Absolutely," he answered.
+
+Her maid came in just then, and Mannering offered to withdraw. She made
+no effort to detain him, and he went at once in search of his host and
+hostess. He found every one assembled in the hall below. Lord Redford,
+Borrowdean, and the chief whip of his party were talking together in a
+corner, and from their significant look at his approach, he felt sure
+that he himself had been the subject of their conversation. The situation
+was more than a little awkward. Lord Redford stepped forward and welcomed
+him cordially.
+
+"I'm afraid you've been knocking yourself up, Mannering," he said. "I've
+just been proposing to Culthorpe here that we bar politics completely for
+twenty-four hours. We'll leave the dinner table with the ladies, and you
+and I will play golf to-morrow. I've had Taylor down here, and I can
+assure you that my links are worth playing over now. Then on Thursday
+we'll have a conference."
+
+"I was scarcely sure," Mannering said, with a slight smile, "whether
+I should be expected to stay until then. Sir Leslie has told you of my
+telegrams?"
+
+"Yes, yes," Lord Redford said, quickly. "We've postponed the meetings for
+the present. We'll talk that all out later on. You've had some tea, I
+hope? No? Well, Eleanor, you are a nice hostess," he added, turning to
+his wife. "Give Mr. Mannering some tea at once, and feed him up with hot
+cakes. Come into the billiard-room afterwards, Mannering, will you? I've
+got a new table in the winter-garden, and we're going to have a pool
+before dinner."
+
+Berenice came in and laid her hand upon her host's arm.
+
+"You need not worry about Mr. Mannering," she declared. "He is going to
+have tea with me at that little table, and I am going to take him for a
+walk in the park afterwards."
+
+"So long as you feed him well," Lord Redford declared, with a little
+laugh, "and turn up in good time for dinner, you may do what you like. If
+you take my advice, Berenice, you will join our league. We have pledged
+ourselves not to utter a word of shop for twenty-four hours."
+
+"I submit willingly," Berenice answered. "Mr. Mannering and I will find
+something else to talk about."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X
+
+THE END OF A DREAM
+
+
+"You can guess why I brought you here, perhaps," Berenice said, gently,
+as she motioned him to sit down by her side. "This place, more than any
+other I know, certainly more than any other at Bayleigh, seems to me to
+be completely restful. There are the trees, you see, and the water, and
+the swans, that are certainly the laziest creatures I know. You look to
+me as though you needed rest, Lawrence."
+
+"I suppose I do," he answered, slowly. "I am not sure, though, whether
+I deserve it."
+
+"You are rather a self-distrustful mortal," she remarked, leaning back in
+her corner and looking at him from under her parasol. "You have worked
+hard all the session, and now you have finished up by three weeks of,
+I should think, herculean labour. If you do not deserve rest who does?"
+
+"The rest which I deserve," Mannering answered, bitterly, "is the rest of
+those whose bones are bleaching amongst the caves and corals of the sea
+there! That is Matapan Point, isn't it, where the hidden rocks are?"
+
+She nodded.
+
+"Really, you are developing into a very gloomy person," she said.
+"Lawrence, don't let us fence with one another any longer. What you may
+decide to do politically may be ruinous to your career, to your chance of
+usefulness in the world, and to my hopes. But I want you to understand
+this. It can make no difference to me. I have had dreams perhaps of a
+great future, of being the wife of a Prime Minister who would lead his
+country into a new era of prosperity, who would put the last rivets into
+the bonds of a great imperial empire. But one never realizes all one's
+hopes, Lawrence. I love politics. I love being behind the scenes, and
+helping to move the pawns across the board. But I am a woman, too,
+Lawrence, and I love you. Put everything connected with your public life
+on one side. Let me ask you this. You are changed. Has anything come
+between us as man and woman?"
+
+"Yes," he answered, "something has come between us."
+
+She sat quite still for several minutes. She prayed that he too might
+keep silence, and he seemed to know her thoughts. Over the little sheet
+of ornamental water, down the glade of beech and elm trees narrowing
+towards the cliffs, her eyes travelled seawards. It was to her a terrible
+moment. Mannering had represented so much to her, and her standard was a
+high one. If there was a man living whom she would have reckoned above
+the weaknesses of the herd, it was he. In those days at Blakely she had
+almost idealized him. The simple purity of his life there, his delicate
+and carefully chosen pleasures, combined with his almost passionate love
+of the open places of the earth, had led her to regard him as something
+different from any other man whom she had ever known. All Borrowdean's
+hints and open statements had gone for very little. She had listened and
+retained her trust. And now she had a horrible fear. Something had gone
+out of the man, something which went for strength, something without
+which he seemed to lack that splendid militant vitality which had always
+seemed to her so admirable. Perhaps he was going to make a confession,
+one of those crude, clumsy confessions of a stained life, which have
+drawn the colour and the joy from so many beautiful dreams. She shivered
+a little, but she inclined her head to listen.
+
+"Well," she said, "what is it?"
+
+"I have asked another woman to marry me only a few hours ago," he said,
+quietly.
+
+Berenice was a proud woman, and for the moment she felt her love for this
+man a dried-up and shrivelled thing. She was white to the lips, but she
+commanded her voice, and her eyes met his coldly.
+
+"May I inquire into the circumstances--of this--somewhat remarkable
+proceeding?" she inquired.
+
+"There is a woman," he said, "whose life I helped to wreck--not in the
+orthodox way," he added, with a note of scorn in his tone, "but none the
+less effectually. The one recompense I never thought of offering her was
+marriage. I have seen that, despite all my efforts to aid her, her life
+has been a failure. Her friends have been the wrong sort of friends, her
+life the wrong sort of life. What it was that was dragging her downwards
+I never guessed, for she, too, in her way, was a proud woman. To-day she
+sent for me. What passed between us is her secret as much as mine. I can
+only tell you that before I left I had asked her to marry me."
+
+"I think," she said, calmly, "that you need tell me no more."
+
+"There is very little more that I can tell you," he answered. "I
+have no affection for her, and she has refused to marry me. But she
+remains--between us--irrevocably!"
+
+"You are lucidity itself," she replied. "Will you forgive me if I leave
+you? I am scarcely used to this sort of situation, and I should like to
+be alone."
+
+"Go by all means, Berenice," he answered. "You and I are better apart.
+But there is one thing which I must say to you, and you must hear. What
+has passed between you and me is the epitome of the love-making of my
+life. You are the only woman whom I have desired to make my wife. You are
+the only woman whom I have loved, and shall love until I die. I can make
+you no reparation, none is possible! Yet these things are my
+justification."
+
+Berenice had turned away. The passionate ring of truth in his tone
+arrested her footsteps. She paused. Her heart was beating very fast, her
+coldness was all assumed. It was so much happiness to throw away, if
+indeed there was a chance. She turned and faced him, nervous, gaunt,
+hollow-eyed, the wreck of his former self. Pity triumphed in spite of
+herself. What was this leaven of weakness in the man, she wondered, which
+had so suddenly broken him down? He had only to hold on his way and he
+would be Prime Minister in a year. And at the moment of trial he had
+crumpled up like a piece of false metal. A wave of false sentiment, a
+maniacal hyper-conscientiousness, had been sufficient to sap the very
+strength from his bones. And then--there was this other woman. Was she to
+let him go without an effort? He might recover his sanity. It was perhaps
+a mere nervous breakdown, which had made him the prey of strange fancies.
+She spoke to him differently. She spoke once more as the woman who loved
+him.
+
+"Lawrence," she said, "you are telling me too much, and not enough. If
+you want to send me away I must go. But tell me this first. What claim
+has this woman upon you?"
+
+"It is not my secret," he groaned. "I cannot tell you."
+
+"Leslie Borrowdean knows it," she said. "I could have heard it, but I
+refused to listen. Remember, whatever you may owe to other people you owe
+me something, too."
+
+"It is true," he answered. "Well, listen. I killed her husband!"
+
+"You! You--killed her husband!" she repeated vaguely.
+
+"Yes! She shielded me. There was an inquest, and they found that he had
+heart disease. No one knew that I had even seen him that day, no one save
+she and a servant, who is dead. But the truth lives. He had reason to be
+angry with me--over a money affair. He came home furious, and found me
+alone with his wife. He called me--well, it was a lie--and he struck me.
+I threw him on one side--and he fell. When we picked him up he was dead."
+
+"It was terrible!" she said, "but you should have braved it out. They
+could have done very little to you."
+
+"I know it," he answered. "But I was young, and my career was just
+beginning. The thing stunned me. She insisted upon secrecy. It would
+reflect upon her, she thought, if the truth came out, so I acquiesced,
+I left the house unseen. All these days I have had to carry the burden of
+this thing with me. To-day--seemed to be the climax. For the first time I
+understood."
+
+"She can never marry you," Berenice said. "It would be horrible."
+
+"She refused to marry me to-day," he answered, "but she laid her life
+bare, and I cannot marry any one else."
+
+Berenice was trembling. She was no longer ashamed to show her agitation.
+
+"I am very sorry for you, Lawrence," she said. "I am very sorry for
+myself. Good-bye!"
+
+She left him, and Mannering sank back upon the seat.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI
+
+BORROWDEAN SHOWS HIS "HAND"
+
+
+"To be plain with you," Borrowdean remarked, "Mannering's defection would
+be irremediable. He alone unites Redford, myself, and--well, to put it
+crudely, let us say the Imperialistic Liberal Party with Manningham and
+the old-fashioned Whigs who prefer the ruts. There is no other leader
+possible. Redford and I talked till daylight this morning. Now, can
+nothing be done with Mannering?"
+
+"To be plain with you, too, then, Sir Leslie," Berenice answered, "I do
+not think that anything can be done with him. In his present frame of
+mind I should say that he is better left alone. He has worked himself up
+into a thoroughly sentimental and nervous state. For the moment he has
+lost his sense of balance."
+
+Borrowdean nodded.
+
+"Desperate necessity," he said, "sometimes justifies desperate measures.
+We need Mannering, the country and our cause need him. If argument will
+not prevail there is one last alternative left to us. It may not be such
+an alternative as we should choose, but beggars must not be choosers. I
+think that you will know what I mean."
+
+"I have no idea," Berenice answered.
+
+"You are aware," he continued, "that there is in Mannering's past history
+an episode, the publication of which would entail somewhat serious
+consequences to him."
+
+"Well?"
+
+It was a most eloquent monosyllable, but Borrowdean had gone too far to
+retreat.
+
+"I propose that we make use of it," he said. "Mannering's attitude is
+rankly foolish, or I would not suggest such a thing. But I hold that we
+are entitled, under the circumstances, to make use of any means whatever
+to bring him to his senses."
+
+Berenice smiled. They were standing together upon a small hillock in the
+park, watching the golf.
+
+"Charlatanism in politics does not appeal to me," she said, drily. "Any
+party that adopted such means would completely alienate my sympathies.
+No, my dear Sir Leslie, don't stoop to such low-down means. Mannering is
+honest, but infatuated. Win him back by fair means, if you can, but don't
+attempt anything of the sort you are suggesting. I, too, know his
+history, from his own lips. Any one who tried to use it against him,
+would forfeit my friendship!"
+
+"Success then would be bought too dearly," Borrowdean answered, with
+a gallantry which it cost him a good deal to assume. "May I pass on,
+Duchess, in connexion with this matter, to ask you a somewhat more
+personal question?"
+
+"I think," Berenice said, calmly, "that I can spare you the necessity.
+You were going to speak, I believe, of the engagement between Lawrence
+Mannering and myself."
+
+"I was," Borrowdean admitted.
+
+"It does not exist any longer," Berenice said, "I should be glad if you
+would inform any one who has heard the rumour that it is without any
+foundation."
+
+Borrowdean looked thoughtfully at the woman by his side.
+
+"I am very glad to hear it," he declared. "I am glad for many reasons,
+and I am glad personally."
+
+She raised her eyebrows.
+
+"Indeed! I cannot imagine how it should affect you personally."
+
+"I perhaps said more than I meant to," he replied, calmly. "I am a poor,
+struggling politician myself, whose capital consists of brains and a
+capacity for work, and whose hopes are coloured with perhaps too daring
+ambitions. Amongst them--"
+
+"Mr. Mannering has holed out from off the green," she interrupted.
+"Positively immoral, I call it."
+
+"Amongst them," Borrowdean continued, calmly, "is one which some day or
+other I must tell you, for indeed you are concerned in it."
+
+"I can assure you, Sir Leslie," she said, looking at him steadily,
+"that I am not at all a sympathetic person. My strong advice to you would
+be--not to tell me. I do not think that you would gain anything by it."
+
+Borrowdean met his fate with a bow and a shrug of the shoulders.
+
+"It only remains," he said, "for me to beg you to pardon what might seem
+like presumption. Shall we meet them on the last green?"
+
+Mannering would have avoided Berenice, but she gave him no option. She
+laid her hand upon his arm, and volunteered to show him a new way home.
+
+"You must be on your guard, Lawrence," she said. "Lord Redford is very
+fond of concealing his plans to the last moment, but he is a very clever
+man. And Sir Leslie Borrowdean would give his little finger to catch you
+tripping. All this avoidance of politics is part of a scheme. They will
+spring something upon you quite suddenly. Don't give any hasty pledges."
+
+"Thank you for your warning," he said. "I will be careful."
+
+"Tell me," she said, "as a friend, what are your plans? Forget that I am
+interested in politics altogether. I simply want to know how you are
+spending your time for the next few months."
+
+"It depends upon them," he answered, looking downwards into the valley,
+where Lord Redford and Borrowdean were walking side by side. "If they ask
+me to resign my seat I shall go North again, and it is just possible that
+I might come back into the House as a labour member. On the other hand,
+if they are content with such support as I can give them, and to have me
+on the fence at present so far as the tariff question is concerned, why,
+I shall go back and do the best I can for them."
+
+"You are not quite won over to the other side yet, then," she remarked,
+smiling.
+
+"Not yet," he answered. "If ever there was an honest doubter, I am one.
+If I had never left my study, England could not have contained a more
+rabid opponent of any change in our fiscal policy than I. I am like a
+small boy who is absolutely sure that he has worked out his sum
+correctly, but finds the answer is not the one which his examiner
+expects. There is something wrong somewhere. I want, if I can, to
+discover it. I only want the truth! I don't see why it should be so hard
+to find, why figures and common sense should clash entirely and horribly
+with existing facts."
+
+"You wore dun-coloured spectacles when you took your walks abroad," she
+said, smiling. "No one else seems to have discovered so distressing a
+state of affairs as you have spoken of."
+
+"Because they never looked beneath the surface," he answered. "I myself
+might have failed to understand if I had not been shown. Remember that
+our workingman of the better class does not go marching through the
+streets with an unemployed banner and a tin cup when he is in want. He
+takes his half wages and closes the door upon his sufferings. God help
+him!"
+
+"Adieu, politics," she declared, with a shrug of the shoulders. "Isn't
+that Clara playing croquet with Major Bristow? I wish I didn't dislike
+that man so much. I hate to see the child with him."
+
+Mannering sighed.
+
+"Poor Clara!" he said. "I am afraid I have left her a good deal to
+herself lately."
+
+"I am afraid you have," she agreed, a little gravely. "May I give you
+a word of advice?"
+
+"You know that I should be grateful for it," he declared.
+
+"Be sure that she never goes to the Bristows again, and ask her whether
+she has any other card debts. It may be my fancy, but I don't like the
+way that man hangs about her, and looks at her. I am sure that she does
+not like him, and yet she never seems to have the courage to snub him."
+
+"I am very much obliged to you," he said. "I will speak to her to-day."
+
+"I don't know where I am going, or what I shall do for the autumn," she
+continued, with a little sigh, "but if you like to trust Clara with me I
+will look after her. I think that she needs a woman. Yes, I thought so.
+Redford and Sir Leslie are waiting for you. Go and have it out with them,
+my friend."
+
+"You are too kind to me," he said; "kinder than I deserve!"
+
+"Oh, I don't know," she answered. "I am afraid that my kindness is only
+another form of selfishness. I am rather a lonely person, you know. Lord
+Redford is beckoning to you. I am going to break up that croquet party."
+
+Mannering joined the other two men. Berenice strolled on to the lawn.
+Major Bristow eyed her coming with some disfavour. He was one of the men
+whom she always ignored. Clara, on the other hand, seemed proportionately
+relieved.
+
+"I want you to come to my room as soon as you possibly can, child,"
+Berenice said. "Shall I wait while you finish your game?"
+
+"Oh, I will come at once," Clara exclaimed, laying down her mallet.
+"Major Bristow will not mind, I am sure."
+
+Major Bristow looked as though he did mind very much, but lacked the
+nerve to say so. Berenice calmly took Clara by the arm and led her away.
+
+"You are not engaged to Major Bristow by any chance, are you?" she asked,
+calmly.
+
+"Engaged to Major Bristow? Heavens, no!" Clara answered. "I don't think
+he is in the least a marrying man."
+
+"So much the better for our sex," Berenice answered. "I wouldn't spend so
+much time with him, my dear, if I were you. I have known people with
+nicer reputations."
+
+Clara turned a shade paler.
+
+"I can never get away from him," she said. "He follows me--everywhere,
+and--"
+
+"You do not by any chance, I suppose, owe him money?" Berenice asked.
+"They tell me that he has a somewhat objectionable habit of winning money
+from girls, more than they can afford to pay, and then suggesting that it
+stand over for a time."
+
+Clara turned towards her with terrified eyes.
+
+"I--I do owe Major Bristow a little still," she admitted. "I seem to have
+been so unlucky. He told me that any time would do, that I should win it
+back again, and I had no idea what stakes we were playing. I don't touch
+a card now at all, but this was at Ellingham House. They insisted on my
+making a fourth at bridge."
+
+Berenice tightened her grasp upon the girl's arm.
+
+"Don't say anything about this to your uncle just now," she insisted. "I
+am going to take you up to my room and write you a cheque for the amount,
+whatever it may be. Afterwards I will have a talk with Major Bristow.
+Nonsense, child, don't cry! The money is nothing to me, and I always
+promised your uncle that I would look after you a little."
+
+"I have been such a fool!" the girl sobbed.
+
+Berenice for a moment was also sad. Her lips quivered, her eyes were
+wistful.
+
+"We all think that sometimes, child," she said, quietly. "We all have our
+foolish moments and our hours of repentance, even the wisest of us!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII
+
+SIR LESLIE BORROWDEAN INCURS A HEAVY DEBT
+
+
+"I suppose," Lord Redford remarked, thoughtfully, "politics represents a
+different thing to all of us, according to our temperament. To me, I must
+confess, it is a plain, practical business, the business of law-making.
+To you, Mannering, I fancy that it appeals a little differently. Now, let
+us understand one another. Are you prepared to undertake this campaign
+which we planned out a few months ago?"
+
+"If I did undertake it," Mannering said, "it would be to leave unsaid the
+things which you would naturally expect from me, and to say things of
+which you could not possibly approve. I am very sorry. You can command my
+resignation at any moment, if you will. But my views, though in the main
+they have not changed, are very much modified."
+
+Lord Redford nodded.
+
+"That," he said, "is our misfortune, but it certainly is not your
+fault. As for your resignation, if you crossed the floor of the House
+to-morrow we should not require it of you. You are responsible to your
+constituents only. We dragged you back into public life--you see I admit
+it freely--and we are willing to take our risk. Whether you are with us
+or against us, we recognize you as one of those whose place is amongst
+the rulers of the people."
+
+"You are very generous, Lord Redford," Mannering answered.
+
+"Not at all. It is no use being peevish. You are a great disappointment
+to us, but we have not given up hope. If you are not altogether with us
+to-day, there is to-morrow. I tell you frankly, Mannering, that I look
+upon you as a man temporarily led astray by a wave of sentimentality. So
+long as the world lasts there will be rich men and poor, but you must
+always remember in considering this that it is character as well as
+circumstances which is at the root of the acquisition of wealth.
+Generations have gone to the formation of our social fabric. It is the
+slow evolution of the human laws of necessity. The socialist and the
+sentimentalist and the philanthropist, dropping gold through his fingers,
+have each had their fling at it, but their cry is like the cry from the
+wilderness--a long, lone thing! And then to come to the real point,
+Mannering. Grant for a moment all that you have told Borrowdean and
+myself about the condition of the labour classes in the great towns and
+the universal depression of trade. How can you possibly imagine that the
+imposition of tariff duties is the sovereign, or even a possible, remedy?
+Why, you yourself have been one of the most brilliant pamphleteers
+against anything of the sort. You have been called the Cobden of the day.
+You cannot throw principles away like an old garment."
+
+"Let us leave for one moment," Mannering answered, "the personal side of
+the matter. I have seen in the majority of our large cities terrible and
+convincing proof of the decline of our manufacturing industries. I have
+seen the outcome of this in hundreds of ruined homes, in a whole
+generation coming into the world half starved, half clothed--God help
+those children. I have always maintained that the labouring classes
+should be the happiest race of people in this country. I find them
+without leisure or recreation, fighting fate with both hands for food.
+Redford, the whole world has never shown us a greater tragedy than the
+one which we others deliberately and persistently close our eyes to--I
+mean the struggle for life which is being waged in every one of our great
+cities."
+
+"We have statistics," Borrowdean began.
+
+"Damn statistics!" Mannering interrupted. "I have juggled with figures
+myself in the old days, and I know how easy it is. So do you, and so does
+Redford. This is what I want to put to you. The tragedy is there. Perhaps
+those who have faced it and come back again to tell of their experiences
+have been a little hysterical--the horror of it has carried them away.
+They may not have adopted the most effectual means of making the world
+understand, but it is there. I have seen it. A thousandth part of this
+misery in a country with which we had nothing to do, and no business to
+interfere, and we should be having mass meetings at Exeter Hall, and
+making general asses of ourselves all over the country, shrieking for
+intervention, wasting a whole dictionary of rhetoric, and probably
+getting well snubbed for our pains. And because the murders are by slow
+poison instead of with steel, because they are in our own cities and
+amongst our own people, we accept them with a sort of placid
+satisfaction. You, Lord Redford, speak of character and enunciate social
+laws, and Borrowdean will argue that after all the trade of the country
+is not so bad as it might be, and will make an epigram on the importation
+of sentimentality into politics. In plain words, Lord Redford, we, as a
+party, are asleep to what is going on. One statesman has recognized it,
+and proposed a startling and drastic remedy. We attack the remedy tooth
+and nail, but we place forward no counter proposition. It is as though a
+dying man were attended by two doctors, one of whom has prepared a remedy
+which the other declines to administer without suggesting one of his own.
+It is not a logical position. The medicine may not cure, but let the man
+have his chance of life."
+
+"Your simile," Lord Redford said, "assumes that the man is dying."
+
+"I have seen the mark of death upon his face," Mannering answered. "The
+men who are traitors to their country to-day are those who, healthy
+enough themselves, talk causeless and shallow optimism which is fed alone
+by their own prosperity. The doctrine of Christ is the care of others.
+If you do not believe, the sick-room is open also to you; go there
+unprejudiced, and with an open mind, and you will come away as I have
+come away."
+
+"Must we take it, then, Mannering," Lord Redford said, gravely, "that you
+are prepared to support the administering of the medicine you spoke of?"
+
+Mannering was silent for a moment.
+
+"At least," he said, "I am not going to be amongst those who cry out
+against it and offer nothing themselves. I am going to analyze that
+medicine, and if I see a chance of life in it I shall say, let us run
+a little risk, rather than stand by inactive, to look upon the face of
+death. In other words, I become for the moment a passive figure in
+politics so far as this question is concerned."
+
+Lord Redford held out his hand.
+
+"Let it go at that, Mannering," he said. "I believe that you will come
+back to us. We shall be always glad of your support, but of course you
+will understand that the position from to-day is changed. If you had
+carried the standard, as we had hoped, the reward also was to have been
+yours. We must elect one of ourselves to take your place. To put it
+plainly, your defection now releases us from all pledges."
+
+"I understand," Mannering answered. "It was scarcely ambition which
+brought me back into politics, and I must work for the cause in which I
+believe. If I am forced to take any definite action, I shall, of course,
+resign my seat."
+
+The door closed behind him. Borrowdean struck a match, and Lord Redford
+looked thoughtfully out of the window across the park.
+
+"I was always afraid of this," Borrowdean said, gloomily. "There is a
+leaven of madness in the man."
+
+Lord Redford shrugged his shoulders.
+
+"Genius or madness," he remarked. "We may yet see him a modern Rienzi
+carried into power on the shoulders of the people. Such a man might
+become anything. As a matter of fact, I think that he will go back into
+his study. He has the brain to fashion wonderful thoughts, and the lips
+to fire them into life. But I doubt his adaptability. I cannot imagine
+him ever becoming a real and effective force."
+
+Borrowdean, who was bitterly disappointed, smoked furiously.
+
+"We shall see," he said. "If Mannering is not for us, I think that I can
+at least promise that he does no harm on the other side."
+
+Lord Redford turned away from the window. He eyed Borrowdean curiously.
+
+"It was you," he remarked, "who brought Mannering back into public life.
+You had a certain reward for it, and you would have had a much greater
+one if things had gone our way. But I want you to remember this.
+Mannering is best left alone--now, for the present. You understand me?"
+
+Borrowdean shrugged his shoulders. There was a good deal too much
+sentiment in politics.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Mannering and Berenice came together for a few moments on the terrace
+after dinner. He was not so completely engrossed in his own affairs as
+to fail to notice her lack of colour and a certain weariness of manner,
+which had kept her more silent than usual during the whole evening.
+
+"Well?" she said.
+
+"There is nothing definite," he answered. "You see, the question of
+tariff reform is not before the House at present, and Redford does not
+require me to resign my seat. But of course it will come to that sooner
+or later."
+
+She leaned over the grey balustrade. With her it was a moment of
+weakness. She was suddenly conscious of the fact that she was no longer
+a young woman. The time when she might hope to find in life the actual
+flavour and joy of passionate living was nearing the end. And a little
+while ago they had seemed so near! The pity of it stirred up a certain
+sense of rebellion in her heart. She was still a beautiful woman. She
+knew very well the arts by which men are enslaved. Why should she not try
+them upon him--this man who loved her, who seemed willing to sacrifice
+both their lives to a piece of senseless quixoticism? Her fingers touched
+his, and held them softly. Thrilled through all his senses, he turned
+towards her wonderingly.
+
+"Are we wise, Lawrence," she whispered, "if indeed you love me? Life is
+so short, and I am not a young woman any more. I have been lonely so
+long. I want a little happiness before I go."
+
+"Don't!" he cried, hoarsely. "You know--what comes between us."
+
+She was a little indignant, but still tender.
+
+"This woman does not want you, Lawrence," she cried. "I do! Oh,
+Lawrence!"
+
+He faltered. She laid her fingers upon his arm.
+
+"Come down the steps," she murmured, "and I will show you Lady Redford's
+rose-garden."
+
+Her touch was compelling. He could not have resisted it. And about his
+heart lay the joy of her near presence. Side by side they moved along the
+terrace--it seemed to him that they passed towards their destiny. The
+gentle rustling of her clothes, their slight, mysterious perfume, was
+like music to him. A sudden wave of passion carried him away. The
+primitive virility of the man, awake at last, demanded its birthright.
+
+And then upon the lower step they met Borrowdean, and he placed himself
+squarely in their way.
+
+"I am sorry to interrupt you," he said, gravely, "but Lord Redford has
+sent me out to look for you and to send you at once into the library.
+Something rather serious has happened."
+
+Mannering came down to earth.
+
+"The evening papers have come," Borrowdean said. "The _Pall Mall_ has the
+whole story. You were seen at the working-men's club in Glasgow!"
+
+Mannering turned towards the house. His nerves were all tingling with
+excitement, but the thread had suddenly been snapped. He was no longer in
+danger of yielding to that flood of delicious sensations. His voice had
+been almost steady as he had begged Berenice to excuse him. Berenice
+stood quite still. Her hand was pressed to her side, her dark eyes were
+lit with passion. She leaned forward towards Borrowdean, and seemed about
+to strike him.
+
+"You will find yourself--repaid for this, Sir Leslie," she murmured.
+
+Then she turned abruptly away. For an hour or more she walked alone
+amongst the trellised walks of Lady Redford's rose-garden. But Mannering
+did not return.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII
+
+THE WOMAN AND--THE OTHER WOMAN
+
+
+"You see, Mannering," Lord Redford said, tapping the outspread evening
+paper with his forefinger, "the situation now presents a different
+aspect. I have no wish to force your hand--a few hours ago I think I
+proved this. But if you are to remain even nominally with us some sort
+of pronouncement must come from you in reply to these statements."
+
+"Yes," Mannering said, "that is quite reasonable."
+
+"The postponement of your campaign has been hinted at before," Lord
+Redford continued, "but we have never used the word abandonment. Now, to
+speak bluntly, the whole fat is in the fire. Your place on the fence is
+no longer possible. You must make your own declaration, and it must be
+for one of three things. You must remain with us, abandon public life for
+a time, or go over to the other side. And you must make promptly an
+announcement of your intentions."
+
+"I have no alternative in the matter," Mannering said. "In fact, I think
+that this has happened opportunely. My presence with you was sure to
+prove something of an embarrassment to all of us. I shall apply for the
+Chiltern Hundreds to-morrow, and I shall not seek to re-enter the present
+Parliament. The few months' respite will be useful to me. I can only
+express to you, Lord Redford, my sincere gratitude for all your
+consideration, and my regret for this disarrangement of your plans."
+
+Lord Redford sighed. Why were men born, he wondered, with such a
+prodigious capacity for playing the fool?
+
+"My chief regret, Mannering," he said, "is for you. The Fates so
+controlled circumstances that you seemed certain to achieve as a young
+man what is the crowning triumph of us veterans in the political world. I
+respect the honest scruples of every man, but it seems to me that you are
+throwing away an unparalleled opportunity in a fit of what a practical
+man like myself can only call sentimentality. I have no more to say.
+Forgive me if I have said too much. For the rest, give us the pleasure of
+your company here for as long as you find it convenient. We will abjure
+politics, and you shall give me my revenge at golf."
+
+Mannering shook his head.
+
+"I am very much obliged to you," he said, "but there is only one course
+open to me. I must go back and make my plans. If I could have a carriage
+for the nine-forty!"
+
+Lord Redford made no effort to induce him to change his mind, though he
+remained courteous to the last.
+
+"I was really glad to have him go," he told Borrowdean afterwards. "His
+very presence--the thought that there could be such colossal fools in the
+world--irritated me beyond measure. You can write his epitaph, Leslie, if
+your humorous vein is working, for the man is politically dead."
+
+"One never knows," Berenice said, quietly. "There must be something great
+about a man capable of such prodigious self-sacrifice. For at heart
+Lawrence Mannering is an ambitious man."
+
+Lord Redford shrugged his shoulders.
+
+"Perhaps," he said, "but I am very sure of this. There is nothing so
+great about the man as his folly."
+
+Berenice smiled.
+
+"We shall see," she said. "Personally, I believe that Sir Leslie would
+find his epitaph a little previous. I saw a great deal of Lawrence
+Mannering in the country, and I think that I understand him as well as
+either of you. I believe that his day will come."
+
+"Well, all I can say is," Lord Redford pronounced, "that I very much
+wish you had left him down at his country home. Between you you have
+created a very serious situation. I must go up to town to-morrow and see
+Manningham. In the meantime, Leslie, I shall leave those reports severely
+alone. We must ignore Mannering altogether."
+
+Berenice turned away with a smile at her lips. She had a very little
+opinion of Lord Redford and his following. Already she saw the man whose
+career they counted finished, at the head of a new and greater party.
+There were plenty of clever men of the coming generation, plenty of room
+for compromises, for the formation of a great national party out of the
+scattered units of a disunited opposition. She believed Mannering strong
+enough to do this. She saw in it greater possibilities than might have
+been forthcoming even if he had been chosen to lead the somewhat ragged
+party represented by Lord Redford and his followers. For the rest, she
+had been very near the success she so desired. Only an accident had
+robbed her of victory. If once they had reached the rose-garden she knew
+that she would have triumphed.
+
+As her maid took off her jewellery that night she smiled at herself in
+the glass. She was thinking of that moment on the terrace. The glow had
+not wholly faded from her face--she saw herself with her long, slender
+neck and smooth, unwrinkled complexion, still beautiful, still a woman to
+be loved. Her maid ventured to whisper a word of respectful compliment.
+Truly Madame La Duchesse was growing younger!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+What strange whim, or evil fate, had turned his feet in that direction?
+Mannering often tried to trace backwards the workings of his mind that
+night, but he never wholly succeeded. He reached London about eleven, and
+sent his man home with his luggage, intending merely to call in at the
+club for letters. But afterwards he remembered only that he had strolled
+aimlessly along homewards, thinking deeply, and not particularly careful
+as to his direction. Even then he would have passed the house in Sloane
+Gardens without looking up, but for the civil "Good-night, sir," of a
+coachman sitting on the box of a small brougham drawn up against the
+kerb. He raised his head to return the salute, and realized at once where
+he was. Almost at the same moment the front door opened, and behind a
+glow of light in the hall he saw a familiar figure in the act of passing
+out to her carriage. The street was well lit, and he was almost opposite
+a lamp-post. She recognized him at once.
+
+"Lawrence," she exclaimed, incredulously. "You--were you coming in?"
+
+She was wrapped from head to foot in a long white opera cloak, but the
+jewels in her hair and at her throat glistened in the flashing light. She
+moved slowly forward to his side. Her maid, who had been coming out to
+open the carriage door, lingered behind.
+
+"I--upon my word, I scarcely know how I came here," he answered, a little
+bewildered. "I was walking home--it is scarcely out of my way--and
+thinking. You are going out?"
+
+She nodded. Looking at her now more closely he saw the shadows under
+her eyes, only imperfectly concealed. The little gesture with which she
+answered him savoured of weariness.
+
+"Yes, I was going out. I have sat alone with my thoughts all day, and I
+don't want to end my life in a lunatic asylum. I want a little change,
+that is all. If you will come in and talk to me instead, that will do as
+well. Any sort of distraction, you see," she added, with a hard little
+laugh, "just to keep me from--"
+
+She did not finish her sentence. He looked at her gravely, and from her
+to the waiting carriage. He suddenly realized how the altered condition
+of affairs must affect her.
+
+"I shall have to come and see you in a day or two," he said. "But
+now--" he hesitated.
+
+"Why not now, then?" she asked.
+
+"You have an engagement," he said.
+
+She shook her head.
+
+"I was only going somewhere to supper. I was going to call for Eva
+Fanesborough, and I suppose we should have had some bridge afterwards.
+Come in instead, Lawrence. I can telephone to her."
+
+Already a presage of evil seemed to be forming itself in his mind. He
+would have given anything to have thought of some valid excuse.
+
+"Your carriage--"
+
+"Pooh!" she answered. "John, I shall not want you to-night," she said to
+the coachman. "Come!"
+
+She led the way, and Mannering followed. As the maid closed the door
+behind them Mannering felt his breath quicken--his sense of depression
+grew stronger. He seemed threatened by some new and intangible danger. He
+stood on the hearthrug while she bent over the switch and turned on the
+electric light in the sitting-room. Then she threw off her cloak and
+looked at him curiously for a moment. Her face softened.
+
+"My dear Lawrence," she said, "has politics done this, or are you ill?"
+
+"I am quite well," he answered. "A little tired, perhaps. I have had
+rather a trying day."
+
+She rang the bell, and ordered sandwiches and wine.
+
+"You look like a corpse," she said, and stood over him while he ate and
+drank. And all the time that indefinable fear within him grew. She made
+him smoke. Then she leaned back in an easy-chair and looked across at
+him.
+
+"You had something to say to me. What was it?"
+
+"Nothing good," he answered. "I have quarrelled with my party, and I have
+to resign my seat in the House."
+
+"Already?"
+
+"Already! I am sorry, as of course in a few months' time I should have
+been in office, and drawing a considerable salary. As it is--" he
+hesitated.
+
+"Oh, I understand!" she said. "Well, it doesn't matter much. I only have
+the house for six months furnished, and that's paid for in advance. John
+must go, and the horses can be sold."
+
+He looked at her in amazement. Only a few months ago she had talked very
+differently.
+
+"I--I am not sure whether all that will be necessary," he said. "I can
+find a tenant for Blakely, and I daresay I can manage another hundred a
+year or so. Only, of course, the large increase we had thought of will
+not be possible now."
+
+"No, I suppose not," she answered, idly.
+
+He moved in his chair uncomfortably. He found her wholly
+incomprehensible.
+
+"What a beast I must have seemed to you always," she exclaimed, suddenly.
+
+"Why?" he asked, pointlessly.
+
+"I've sponged on you all my life, and you're not a rich man, are you,
+Lawrence? Then I dragged you into politics to supply me with the means to
+spend more money. My claim on you was one of sentiment only, but--I've
+made you pay. No wonder you hate me!"
+
+"Your claim on me, even to every penny I possess," Mannering answered,
+"was a perfectly just one. I have never denied it, and I have done my
+best. And as to hating you, you know quite well it is not true!"
+
+"Ah!" She rose suddenly to her feet, and before he had realized her
+intention she was on her knees by his side. She caught at his hand and
+kept her face hidden from him.
+
+"Lawrence," she cried, "I was mad the other day. It was all the pent-up
+bitterness of years which seemed to escape me so suddenly. I said so much
+that I did not mean to--I was mad, dear. Oh, Lawrence, I am so lonely!"
+
+Then the fear in his heart became a live thing. He was dumb. He could not
+have spoken had he tried.
+
+"It was your coldness all these years," she murmured. "You were different
+once. You know that. At first, when the horror of what happened was
+young, I thought I understood. I thought, as it wore off, that you would
+be different. The horror has gone now, Lawrence. We know that it was an
+accident, it might as well have been another as you. But you have not
+changed. I have given up hoping. I have tried everything else, and I am a
+very miserable woman. Now I am going to pray to you, Lawrence. You do not
+care for me more. Pretend that you do! You cannot give me your love. Give
+me the best you can. Don't despise me too utterly, Lawrence! Pity me, if
+you will. Heaven knows I need it. And--you will be a little kind!"
+
+Her hands were clasped about his neck. He disengaged himself gently.
+
+"Blanche!" he cried, hoarsely, "I love another woman!"
+
+"Are you engaged to her?"
+
+"No! Not now!"
+
+"Then what does it matter? What does it matter, anyhow? It is not the
+real thing I am asking you for, Lawrence--only the make-belief! Keep the
+rest for her, if you must, but give me lies, false looks, hollow
+caresses, anything! You see what depths I have fallen to."
+
+He held her hands tightly. A great pity for her filled his heart--pity
+for her, and for himself.
+
+"Blanche," he said, "there is one way only. It is for you to decide. Will
+you marry me? I will do my best to make you a good husband!"
+
+"Marry you?" she gasped. "Lawrence, I dare not!"
+
+"I cannot alter the past," he said, sadly. "It never seemed to me
+possible that you could care for my--after what happened. But--"
+
+"Oh, it is not that," she interrupted. "There is--the other woman, and,
+Lawrence, I should be afraid. I am not good enough!"
+
+"Whatever you are, Blanche," he said, gravely, "remember that it is I who
+am responsible for your having been left alone to face the world. Your
+follies belong to me. I am quite free to share their burden with you."
+
+"But the other woman?" she faltered.
+
+"I must love her always," he said, quietly, "but I cannot marry her."
+
+"And you would kiss me sometimes, Lawrence?" she whispered.
+
+He took her quietly into his arms and kissed her forehead.
+
+"I will do my best, Blanche," he said. "I dare not promise any more."
+
+
+
+
+BOOK III
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+MATRIMONY AND AN AWKWARD MEETING
+
+
+"How delightfully Continental!" Blanche exclaimed, as the head-waiter
+showed them to their table. "Hester, did you ever see anything more
+quaint?"
+
+"It is perfect," the girl answered, leaning back in her chair, and
+looking around with quiet content.
+
+Mannering took up the menu and ordered dinner. Then he lit a cigarette
+and looked around.
+
+"It certainly is quaint," he said. "One dines out of doors often enough,
+especially over here, but I have never seen a courtyard made such
+excellent use of before. The place is really old, too."
+
+They had found their way to a small seaside resort, in the north of
+France, which Mannering had heard highly praised by some casual
+acquaintance. The courtyard of the small hotel was set out with round
+dining tables, and the illumination was afforded by Japanese lanterns
+hung from every available spot. A small band played from a wooden
+balcony. Monsieur, the proprietor, walked anxiously from table to
+table, all smiles and bows. Through the roofed way, which led from the
+street, one caught a distant glimpse of the sea.
+
+Mannering, to the surprise of his friends, and to his own secret
+amazement, had survived the crisis which had seemed at one time likely
+enough to wreck his life. Politically he was no longer a great power, for
+the party whose cause he had half espoused had met with a distinct
+reverse, and he himself was without a seat in Parliament, but amongst the
+masses his was still a name to conjure with. Socially his marriage with
+Blanche Phillimore had scarcely proved the disaster which every one had
+anticipated. Her old ways and manner of life lay in the background. She
+had aged a little, perhaps, and grown thinner, but she had shown from the
+first an almost pathetic desire to adapt her life to his, to assume an
+altogether unobtrusive position, and if she could not in any way
+influence his destiny, at least she did not hamper it. She had made no
+demands upon him which he was not able to grant. She had lived where he
+had suggested, she had never embarrassed him with too vehement an
+affection. As for Mannering himself, he had found solace in work.
+Defeated at the polls, he had declined a safe seat, and remained the
+chosen independent candidate of a great Northern constituency. He
+addressed public meetings occasionally, and he contributed to the
+reviews. Without having ever finally committed himself to a definite
+scheme of tariff reform, he preached everywhere the doctrine of
+consideration. In a modified way he was reckoned now as one of its
+possible supporters.
+
+They were almost halfway through their dinner when some commotion was
+heard in the narrow street outside. Then with much tooting of horns and
+the shrill shouting of directions from the bystanders, two heavily laden
+touring cars turned slowly into the cobbled courtyard, and drew up within
+a few feet of the semicircular line of tables. Mannering's little party
+watched the arrivals with an interest shared by every one in the place.
+Muffled up in cloaks and veils, they were at first unrecognized. It was
+Mannering himself who first realized who they were.
+
+"Clara!" he exclaimed to the young lady who was standing almost by his
+side. "Welcome to Bonestre!"
+
+She turned towards him with a little start.
+
+"Uncle!" she exclaimed. "How extraordinary! Why, how long have you been
+here?"
+
+"We arrived this afternoon," he answered. "You remember Hester, don't
+you? And this is Mrs. Mannering."
+
+Clara shook hands with both. She declared afterwards that she was
+surprised into it, but she would certainly never have recognized in the
+quiet, rather weary-looking, woman who sat at her uncle's side the
+Blanche Phillimore whom she had more than once passionately declared that
+she would sooner die than speak to. She murmured a few mechanical words,
+and then, suddenly realizing the situation, she glanced a little
+anxiously over her shoulder.
+
+"You know who I am with, uncle?" she whispered.
+
+But Mannering was already face to face with Berenice. She held out her
+hand without hesitation. If she felt any emotion she concealed it
+perfectly. Her voice was steady and cordial, if her cheeks were pale. The
+dust lay thickly upon them all. Mannering, tall and grave in his plain
+dinner clothes and black tie, stood almost like a statue before her,
+until her extended hand invited his movement.
+
+"What an extraordinary meeting," she said, quietly. "I am very glad to
+see you again, Mr. Mannering. We have had such a ride, all the way from
+Havre along roads an inch thick in dust. This is your wife, is it not?
+I am very glad to know you, Mrs. Mannering."
+
+All that might have been embarrassing in the encounter seemed dissolved
+by the utterly conventional tone of her greeting. Sir Leslie Borrowdean
+came up and joined them, and Lord and Lady Redford. Then the little
+party, escorted by the landlord, disappeared into the hotel. Mannering
+resumed his seat and continued his dinner. He leaned over and addressed
+his wife. His tone was kinder than usual.
+
+"When we have had our coffee," he said, "I hope that you will feel like
+a walk. The moon is coming up over the sea."
+
+She shook her head.
+
+"Take Hester," she said. "She loves that sort of thing. I have a
+headache, and I should like to go upstairs as soon as possible."
+
+So Hester walked with Mannering out to the rocks where pools of water,
+left by the tide, shone like silver in the moonlight. They talked very
+little at first, but as they leaned over the rail and looked out seawards
+Hester broke the silence, and spoke of the things which they both had in
+their minds.
+
+"I am sorry they came," she said. "I am afraid it will upset mother, and
+it is not pleasant for you, is it?"
+
+"For me it is nothing, Hester," he answered, "and I hope that your mother
+will not worry about it. They all behaved very nicely, and we need not
+see much of them."
+
+She passed her arm through his.
+
+"Tell me how you feel about it," she begged. "It must seem to you like a
+glimpse of the life you left when--when you--married!"
+
+"Hester," he said, earnestly, "don't make any mistake about this. Don't
+let your mother make any mistake. It was my political change of views
+which separated me from all my former friends--that entirely. To them I
+am an apostate, and a very bad sort of one. I deserted them just when
+they needed me. I did it from convictions which are stronger to-day than
+ever. But none the less I threw them over. I always said that they very
+much exaggerated my importance as a factor in the situation, and my words
+are proved. They carried the elections without any difficulty, and they
+have formed a strong Government. They can afford to be magnanimous to me.
+If I had stayed with them I should have been in office. As it was, I lost
+even my seat."
+
+"You did what you thought was right," she said, softly. "No one can do
+any more!"
+
+Mannering thought over her words as they walked homewards over the
+sand-dunes. Yes, he had done that! Was he satisfied with the result? He
+had become a minor power in politics. Men spoke of him as a weakling--as
+one who had shrunk from the burden of great responsibility, and left the
+friends who had trusted him in the lurch. And then--there was the other
+thing. He had paid a great price for this woman's salvation. Had he
+succeeded? She had given up all her old ways. She dressed, she lived, she
+carried herself through life even with a furtive, almost a pathetic,
+attempt to reach his standard. Often he caught her watching him as though
+fearful lest some word or action of hers had been displeasing to him.
+And yet--he wondered--was this what she had hoped for? Had he given her
+what she had the right to expect? Had he indeed received value for the
+price he had paid? He asked Hester a sudden question:
+
+"Hester, is your mother happy?"
+
+Hester started a little.
+
+"If she is not," she answered, gravely, "she must be a very ungrateful
+woman."
+
+He left it at that, and together they retraced their steps to the hotel.
+Hester slipped up to her room by a side entrance, but Mannering was
+obliged to pass the table where the new arrivals were lingering over
+their coffee. Clara and Lord Redford both called to him.
+
+"Come and have a smoke with us, Mannering, and tell us all about this
+place," the latter said. "The Duchess and your niece are charmed with it,
+and they want to stay for a few days. Are there any golf links?"
+
+"Come and sit next me, uncle," Clara cried, "and tell me how you like
+being guardian to an heiress. How I have blessed that dear departed aunt
+of mine every day of my life."
+
+Mannering accepted a cigarette, and sat down.
+
+"The golf links are excellent," he said. "As for your aunt, Clara, she
+was a very sensible woman. Her money was so well invested that I have
+practically nothing to do. I expect my duties will commence when the
+young men come!"
+
+"Miss Mannering," Sir Leslie said, gravely, "is not at all attracted by
+young men. She prefers something more staid. I have serious hopes that
+before our little tour is over I shall have persuaded her to marry me!"
+
+"You dear man!" Clara exclaimed. "I only wish you'd give me the chance."
+
+"There's a brazen child to have to chaperon," the Duchess said.
+"Positively asking for a proposal."
+
+"And not in vain," Sir Leslie declared. "Walk down to the sea with me,
+Miss Clara, and I'll propose to you in my most approved fashion. I think
+you said that the investments were sound, Mannering?"
+
+"The investments are all right," Mannering answered, "but I shall have
+nothing to do with fortune-hunters."
+
+"And I a Cabinet Minister!" Sir Leslie declared. "Miss Clara, let us have
+that walk."
+
+"To-morrow night," she promised. "When I get up it will be to go to bed.
+Even your love-making, Sir Leslie, could not keep me awake to-night."
+
+The Duchess rose. The dust was gone, but she was pale, and looked tired.
+
+"Let us leave these men to make plans for us," she said. "I hope we shall
+see something of you to-morrow, Mr. Mannering. Good-night, everybody."
+
+Mannering rose and bowed with the others. For a moment their eyes met.
+Not a muscle of her face changed, and yet Mannering was conscious of a
+sudden wave of emotion. He understood that she had not forgotten!
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+
+THE SNUB FOR BORROWDEAN
+
+
+Berenice sat at one of the small round tables in the courtyard, finishing
+her morning coffee. Sir Leslie sat upon the steps by her side. It was one
+of those brilliant mornings in early September, when the sunlight seems
+to find its way everywhere. Even here, surrounded by the pile of worn
+grey stone buildings, which threw shadows everywhere, it had penetrated.
+A long shaft of soft, warm light stretched across the cobbles to their
+feet. Berenice, slim and elegant, fresh as the morning itself, glanced up
+at her companion with a smile.
+
+"Clara," she remarked, "does not like to be kept waiting."
+
+"She is not down yet," he answered, "and there is something I want to say
+to you."
+
+Her delicate eyebrows were a trifle uplifted.
+
+"Do you think that you had better?" she asked.
+
+"I am a man," he said, "and things are known to me which a woman would
+scarcely discover. Do you think that it is quite fair to send Lady
+Redford out motoring with Mrs. Mannering?"
+
+"Why not?"
+
+"Lady Redford is, of course, ignorant of Mrs. Mannering's antecedents.
+What you may do yourself concerns no one. You make your own social laws,
+and you have a right to. But I do not think that even you have a right to
+pass Blanche Phillimore on to your friends, even under the shelter of
+Mannering's name."
+
+Berenice looked at him for several seconds without speaking. Borrowdean
+bit his lip.
+
+"If we were not acquaintances of long standing, Sir Leslie," she said,
+calmly, "I should consider your remarks impertinent. As it is, I choose
+to look upon them as a regrettable mistake. The person, whoever she may
+be, whom the Duchess of Lenchester chooses to receive is usually
+acceptable to her friends. I beg that you will not refer to the subject
+again."
+
+Sir Leslie bowed.
+
+"I have no more to say," he declared. "Knowing naturally a good deal more
+than you concerning the lady in question, I considered it my duty to say
+what I have said."
+
+"It is the sort of duty," Berenice murmured, "which the whole world seems
+to accept always with a relish. One does not expect it so much from your
+sex. Mrs. Mannering was born one of us, and she has had an unhappy life.
+If she has been indiscreet she has her excuses. I choose to whitewash
+her. Do you understand? I pay dearly enough for my social position, and I
+certainly claim its privileges. I recognize Mrs. Mannering, and I require
+my friends to do so."
+
+Sir Leslie rose up.
+
+"You are, if you will forgive my saying so," he remarked, drily, "more
+generous than wise."
+
+"That," she answered, "is my affair. Here comes Clara. Before you start,
+find Mr. Mannering. He is in the hotel somewhere writing letters, and
+tell him that when he has finished I wish to speak to him."
+
+Sir Leslie only bowed. He felt himself opposed by a will as strong as his
+own, and he was too seriously annoyed to trust himself to speech. Clara,
+in her cool white linen dress, came strolling up.
+
+"What have you been doing to Sir Leslie?" she asked, laughing. "He has
+just gone into the hotel with a face like a thunder-cloud."
+
+"I have been giving him a lesson in Christian charity," Berenice
+answered. "He needs it."
+
+Clara nodded. She understood.
+
+"I think you are awfully kind," she said.
+
+Berenice smiled.
+
+"I hate all narrowness," she said, "and if there is a man on God's earth
+who deserves to have people kind to him it is your uncle."
+
+Sir Leslie returned, and he and Clara departed for the golf links.
+Berenice was left alone in the little grey courtyard, fragrant with the
+perfume of scented shrubs and blossoming plants, filled too, with the
+warm sunlight, which seemed to find its way into every corner. She sat at
+her little table, paler than a few moments ago, her teeth clenched, her
+white fingers clasped together. Underneath her muslin blouse her heart
+had suddenly commenced to beat fiercely--a sense of excitement, long
+absent, was stealing through her veins. The bonds which a year's studied
+self-repression had forged were snapped apart. She knew now what it
+meant, the great inexpressible thing, the one eternal emotion which has
+come throbbing down the world from the days when poets sung their first
+song and painters flung truth on to canvas. She was a woman like the
+others, and she loved. Her unique position in society, her carefully
+studied life, her lofty ambitions, were like vain things crumbling into
+dust before her eyes. A year of cold misery seemed atoned for by the
+simple fact that within a few yards of her he sat writing--that within a
+few minutes he would be by her side. Of the future she scarcely thought.
+Hers was the woman's love, content with small things. Its passion was of
+the soul, and its song was self-sacrifice. But if she had known--if she
+had only known!
+
+He came out to her soon. His manner was quiet and a little grave.
+Self-control came easier to him because the truth had been with him
+longer. Nevertheless, he was not wholly at his ease.
+
+"You know what has happened?" she asked, smiling. "The Redfords have
+taken Mrs. Mannering and her daughter motoring, and Sir Leslie and Clara
+have gone to the golf links. You and I are left to entertain one
+another."
+
+"What would you like to do?" he asked, simply.
+
+"I should like to walk," she answered, "down by the sea somewhere. I am
+ready now."
+
+They made their way through the little town, along the promenade and on
+to the sands beyond. Then a climb, and they found themselves in a thick
+wood stretching back inland from the sea. She pointed to a fallen trunk.
+
+"Let us sit down," she said. "There are so many things I want to ask
+you."
+
+On the way they had spoken only of indifferent matters, yet from the
+first Mannering had felt the presence of a subtle something in her
+deportment towards him, for which he could find no explanation. He
+himself was feeling the tension of this meeting. He had expected to find
+her so different. Gracious, perhaps, because she was a great lady, but
+certainly without any of these suggestions of something kept back, which
+continually, without any sort of direct expression, made themselves felt.
+And when they sat down she said nothing. He had the feeling that it was
+because she dared not trust herself to speak. Surprise and agitation kept
+him, too, silent.
+
+At last she spoke. Her voice was not very steady, and she avoided looking
+at him.
+
+"I should like," she said, "to have you tell me about yourself--about
+your life--and your work."
+
+"It is told in a few words," he answered. "Somewhere, somehow, I have
+failed! I could not adopt the Birmingham programme, I could not oppose
+it. You know what isolation means politically?--abuse from one side and
+contempt from the other. That is what I am experiencing. The working
+classes have some faith in me, I believe. My work, such as it is, is
+solely for them. I suppose the papers tell the truth when they say that
+mine is a ruined career--only, you see, I am trying to do the best I can
+with the pieces."
+
+"Yes," she said, softly, "that is something. To do the best one can with
+the pieces. We all might try to do that."
+
+He smiled.
+
+"You, at least, have no need to consider such a thing," he said. "So far
+as any woman can be preeminent in politics you have succeeded in becoming
+so. I saw that a lady's paper a few weeks ago said that your influence
+outside the Cabinet was more powerful than any one man's within it."
+
+"Yes," she said, calmly, "the papers talk like that. It gives their
+readers something to laugh at! I wonder what you would say, my friend, if
+I told you that I, too, am engaged in that same thankless task. I, too,
+am striving to do the best I can with the pieces."
+
+"You are not serious!" he protested.
+
+"I am very serious indeed," she declared. "Shall I tell you more? Shall
+I tell you when I made my mistake?"
+
+"No!" he cried, hoarsely.
+
+"But I shall," she continued, suddenly gripping his arm. "I meant to tell
+you. I brought you here to tell you. I made my mistake when I let Leslie
+Borrowdean take you back to Lord Redford just as we were entering the
+rose-garden at Bayleigh. Do you remember? I made my mistake when I
+suffered anything in this great world to come between me and a woman's
+only chance of happiness! I made my mistake when I was too proud to tell
+you that I loved you, and that nothing else in the world mattered. There!
+You tried me hard! You know that! But my mistake was none the less fatal.
+I ought to have held fast by you, and I let you go. And I shall suffer
+for it all my days."
+
+"You cared like that?" he cried.
+
+"Worse!" she answered, turning her flushed face towards him. "I care now.
+Kiss me, Lawrence!"
+
+He held her in his arms. Time stood still until she stole away with an
+odd little laugh.
+
+"There," she said, "I have vindicated myself. No one can ever call me a
+proud woman again. And you know the truth! I might have had you all to
+myself and I let you go. Now I am going to do the best I can with the
+pieces. The half of you I want belongs to your wife. I must be content
+with the other half. I suppose I may have that?"
+
+"But your friends--"
+
+"Bosh! My friends and your wife must make the best of it. I shan't rob
+her again as I did just now. You can blot that out--antedate it. It
+belonged to the past. But I am not going through life as I have gone
+through this last year, longing for a sight of you, longing to hear you
+speak, and denying myself just because you are married. Live with your
+wife, Lawrence, and make her as happy as you can, but remember that you
+owe me a great deal, too, and you must do your best to pay it. Don't look
+at me as though I were talking nonsense."
+
+He held her hand. She placed it in his unresistingly. All the lines in
+his face seemed smoothed out. The fire of youth was in his eyes.
+
+"Do you wonder that I am surprised?" he asked. "All this year you have
+made no sign. All the time I have been schooling myself to forget you."
+
+"Don't dare to tell me that you have succeeded!" she exclaimed.
+
+"Not an iota!" he answered. "It was the most miserable failure of my
+life."
+
+She smiled upon him delightfully, and gently withdrew her hand.
+
+"Lawrence," she said, "I am going to talk to you seriously for one
+minute. You are too conscientious for a politician. Don't let the same
+vice spoil our friendship! Certain things you owe to your wife. Mind,
+I admit that, though from some points of view even that might be
+disputed. But you also owe me certain things--and I mean to be paid.
+I won't be avoided, mind. I want to be treated as a very close--and
+dear--companion--and--kiss me once more, Lawrence, and then we'll begin,"
+she wound up, with a little sob in her throat.
+
+An hour later the whole party had _déjeuner_ together in the courtyard of
+the little hotel. The Duchess was noticeably kind to Mrs. Mannering, and
+she snubbed Sir Leslie. Clara looked on a little gravely. The situation
+contained many elements of interest.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III
+
+CLOUDS--AND A CALL TO ARMS
+
+
+The first cloud appeared towards the end of the third day at Bonestre.
+Blanche and Sir Leslie were left alone, and he hastened to improve the
+opportunity.
+
+"The Duchess and your husband," he remarked, "appear very easily to have
+picked up again the threads of their old friendship."
+
+"The Duchess," she answered, "is a very charming woman. I am sure that
+you find her so, don't you?"
+
+"We are very old friends," he answered, "but I was never admitted to
+exactly the same privileges as your husband enjoys."
+
+"The Duchess," she answered, calmly, "is a woman of taste!"
+
+Sir Leslie muttered something under his breath. Blanche made a movement
+as though to take up again the book which she had been reading in a
+sheltered corner of the hotel garden.
+
+"Don't you think," he said, "that we should make better friends than
+enemies?"
+
+"I am not at all sure," she answered, calmly. "To tell you the truth,
+I don't fancy you particularly in either capacity."
+
+He laughed unpleasantly.
+
+"You are scarcely complimentary," he remarked.
+
+"I did not mean to be," she answered. "Why should I?"
+
+"You are content, then, to let your husband drift back into his old
+relations with the Duchess? I presume that you know what they were?"
+
+"Whether I am or not," she answered, "what business is it of yours?"
+
+"I will tell you, if you like," he answered. "In fact, I think it would
+be better. It has been the one desire of my life to marry the Duchess of
+Lenchester myself."
+
+She smiled at him scornfully.
+
+"Come," she said, "let me give you a little advice. Give up the idea.
+They say that lookers-on see most of the game, and so far as I am
+concerned I'm certainly the looker-on of this party. The Duchess doesn't
+care a row of pins about you!"
+
+"There are other marriages, besides marriages of affection," Sir Leslie
+said, stiffly. "The Duchess is ambitious."
+
+"But she is also a woman," Blanche declared. "And she is in love."
+
+"With whom?"
+
+"With my husband! I presume that is clear enough to most people!"
+
+Sir Leslie was a little staggered.
+
+"You take it very coolly," he remarked.
+
+"Why not? The Duchess is too proud a woman to give herself away, and my
+husband--belongs to me!"
+
+"You haven't any idea of taking poison, or anything of that sort, I
+suppose, have you?" he inquired. "The other woman nearly always does
+that."
+
+"Not in real life," Blanche answered, composedly. "Besides, I'm not the
+other woman--I'm the one. The Duchess is the other!"
+
+"But your husband--"
+
+"Do you know, I should prefer not to discuss my husband--with you,"
+Blanche said, calmly, taking up her book. "He is not the sort of man you
+would be at all likely to understand. If you want a rich wife why don't
+you propose to Clara Mannering? I suppose you knew that some unheard-of
+aunt had left her fifty thousand pounds?"
+
+Sir Leslie rose to his feet.
+
+"I don't fancy that you and I are very sympathetic this afternoon," he
+remarked. "I will go and see if any one has returned."
+
+"Do," she answered. "I shall miss you, of course, but my book is
+positively absorbing, and I am dying to go on with it."
+
+Sir Leslie left the garden without another word. Blanche held her book
+before her face until he had disappeared. Then it slipped from her
+fingers. She looked hard into a cluster of roses, and she saw only two
+figures--always the same figures. Her eyes were set, her face was wan and
+old.
+
+"The other woman!" she murmured to herself. "That is what I am. And
+I can't live up to it. I ought to take poison, or get run over or
+something, and I know very well I shan't. Bother the man! Why couldn't
+he leave me alone?"
+
+After dinner that evening she accepted her husband's nightly invitation
+and walked with him for a little while. The others followed.
+
+"How much longer can you stay away from England, Lawrence?" she asked
+him.
+
+"Oh--a fortnight, I should think," he answered. "I am not tied to any
+particular date. You like it here, I hope?"
+
+"Immensely! Are--our friends going to remain?"
+
+"I haven't heard them say anything about moving on yet," he answered.
+
+"Are you in love with the Duchess still, Lawrence?"
+
+"Am I--Blanche!"
+
+"Don't be angry! You made a mistake once, you know. Don't make another.
+I'm not a jealous woman, and I don't ask much from you, but I'm your
+wife. That's all!"
+
+She turned and called to Hester. The little party rearranged itself.
+Mannering found himself with Berenice.
+
+"What was your wife saying to you?" she asked.
+
+He shrugged his shoulders.
+
+"It was the beginning," he remarked.
+
+Berenice sighed.
+
+"It is a strange thing," she said, "but in this world no one can ever be
+happy except at some one else's expense. It is a most unnatural law of
+compensation. Shall we move on to-morrow?"
+
+"The day after," he pleaded. "To-morrow we are going to Berneval."
+
+She nodded.
+
+"We are queer people, I think," she said. "I have been perfectly
+satisfied this week simply to be with you. When it comes to an end
+I should like it to come suddenly."
+
+He thought of her words an hour later, when on his return to the hotel
+they handed him a telegram. He passed it on at once to Lord Redford, and
+glanced at his watch.
+
+"Poor Cunningham," he said, "it was a short triumph for him. I must go
+back to-night, or the first train to-morrow morning. The sitting member
+for my division of Leeds died suddenly last night, Blanche," he said to
+his wife. "I must be on the spot at once."
+
+She rose to her feet.
+
+"I will go and pack," she said.
+
+Lady Redford followed her very soon. Clara and Sir Leslie had not yet
+returned from their stroll. Lord Redford remained alone with them.
+
+"I scarcely know what sort of fortune to wish you, Mannering," he said.
+"Perhaps your first speech will tell us."
+
+Berenice leaned back in her chair.
+
+"I can't imagine you as a labour member in the least," she remarked.
+
+"Doesn't this force your hand a little, Mannering?" Lord Redford said. "I
+understand that you were anxious to avoid a direct pronouncement upon the
+fiscal policy for the present."
+
+Mannering nodded gravely.
+
+"It is quite time I made up my mind," he said. "I shall do so now."
+
+"May we find ourselves in the same lobby!" Lord Redford said. "I will go
+and find my man. He may as well take you to the station in the car."
+
+Berenice smiled at Mannering luminously through the shadowy lights.
+
+"Dear friend," she said, "I am delighted that you are going. Our
+little time here has been delightful, but we had reached its limit.
+I like to think that you are going back into the thick of it. Don't be
+faint-hearted, Lawrence. Don't lose faith in yourself. You have chosen
+a terribly lonely path; if any man can find his way to the top, you can.
+And don't dare to forget me, sir!"
+
+He caught her cheerful tone.
+
+"You are inspiring," he declared. "Thank heaven, I have a twelve hours'
+journey before me. I need time for thought, if ever a man did."
+
+"Don't worry about it," she answered, lightly. "The truth is somewhere in
+your brain, I suppose, and when the time comes you will find it. Much
+better think about your sandwiches."
+
+The car backed into the yard. Blanche reappeared, and behind her
+Mannering's bag.
+
+"I do hope that Hester and I have packed everything," she said. "We could
+come over to-morrow, if there's anything you want us for. If not we shall
+stay here for another week. Good-bye!"
+
+She calmly held up her lips, and Mannering kissed them after a moment's
+hesitation. She remained by his side even when he turned to say farewell
+to Berenice.
+
+"I am sure you ought to be going," she said calmly. "I will send on your
+letters if there are any to-morrow. Wire your address as soon as you
+arrive. Good luck!"
+
+The car glided away. They all stood in a group to see him go, and waved
+indiscriminate farewells. Blanche moved a little apart as the car
+disappeared, and Berenice watched her curiously. She was rubbing her lips
+with her handkerchief.
+
+"A sting!" she remarked, becoming suddenly aware of the other's scrutiny.
+"Nothing that hurts very much!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV
+
+DISASTER
+
+
+Mannering, in his sitting-room at last, locked the door and drew a long
+breath of relief. Upon his ear-drums there throbbed still the yells of
+his enthusiastic but noisy adherents--the truculent cries of those who
+had heard his great speech with satisfaction, of those who saw pass from
+amongst themselves to a newer school of thought one whom they had
+regarded as their natural leader. It was over at last. He had made his
+pronouncement. To some it might seem a compromise. To himself it was the
+only logical outcome of his long period of thought. He spoke for the
+workingman. He demanded inquiry, consideration, experiment. He demanded
+them in a way of his own, at once novel and convincing. Many of the most
+brilliant articles which had ever come from his pen he abjured. He drew
+a sharp line between the province of the student and the duty of the
+politician.
+
+And now he was alone at last, free to think and dream, free to think of
+Bonestre, to wonder what reports of his meeting would reach the little
+French watering-place, and how they would be received. He could see
+Berenice reading the morning paper in the little grey courtyard, with the
+pigeons flying above her head and the sunlight streaming across the
+flags. He could hear Borrowdean's sneer, could see Lord Redford's shrug
+of the shoulders. There is little sympathy in the world for the man who
+dares to change his mind.
+
+There was a knock at the door, and his servant entered with a tray.
+
+"I have brought the whiskey and soda, sandwiches and cigarettes, sir," he
+announced. "I am sorry to say that there is a person outside whom I
+cannot get rid of. His name is Fardell, and he insists upon it that his
+business is of importance."
+
+Mannering smiled.
+
+"You can show him up at once," he ordered; "now, and whenever he calls."
+
+Fardell appeared almost directly. Mannering had seen him before during
+the day, but noticed at once a change in him. He was pale, and looked
+like a man who had received some sort of a shock.
+
+"Come in, Fardell, and sit down," Mannering said. "You look tired. Have a
+drink."
+
+Fardell walked straight to the tray and helped himself to some neat
+whiskey.
+
+"Thank you, sir," he said. "I--I've had rather a knockout blow."
+
+He emptied the tumbler and set it down.
+
+"Mr. Mannering, sir," he said, "I've just heard a man bet twenty to one
+in crisp five-pound bank-notes that you never sit for West Leeds."
+
+"Was he drunk or sober?" Mannering asked.
+
+"Sober as a judge!"
+
+Mannering smiled.
+
+"How often did you take him?" he asked.
+
+"Not once! I didn't dare!"
+
+Mannering, who had been in the act of helping himself to a whiskey and
+soda, looked around with the decanter in his hand.
+
+"I don't understand you," he said, bewildered. "You know very well that
+the chances, so far as they can be reckoned up, are slightly in my
+favour."
+
+"They were!" Fardell answered. "Heaven knows what they are now."
+
+Mannering was a little annoyed. It seemed to him that Fardell must have
+been drinking.
+
+"Do you mind explaining yourself?" he asked.
+
+"I can do so," Fardell answered. "I must do so. But while I am about it
+I want you to put on your hat and come with me."
+
+Mannering laughed shortly.
+
+"What, to-night?" he exclaimed. "No, thank you. Be reasonable, Fardell.
+I've had my day's work, and I think I've earned a little rest. To be
+frank with you, I don't like mysteries. If you've anything to say, out
+with it."
+
+"Right!" Richard Fardell answered. "I am going to ask you a question,
+Mr. Mannering. Go back a good many years, as many years as you like.
+Is there anything in your life as a younger man, say when you first
+entered Parliament, which--if it were brought up against you now--might
+be--embarrassing?"
+
+Mannering did not answer for several moments. He was already pale and
+tired, but he felt what little colour remained leave his face. Least of
+all he had expected this. Even now--what could the man mean? What could
+be known?
+
+"I am not sure that I understand you," he said. "There is nothing that
+could be known! I am sure of that."
+
+"There is a person," Fardell said, slowly, "who has made extraordinary
+statements. Our opponents have got hold of him. The substance of them is
+this: He says that many years ago you were the lover of a married woman,
+that you sold her husband worthless shares and ruined him, and that
+finally--in a quarrel--he declares that he was an eye-witness of
+this--that you killed him."
+
+Mannering slowly subsided into his chair. His cheeks were blanched.
+Richard Fardell watched him with feverish anxiety.
+
+"It is a lie," Mannering declared. "There is no man living who can say
+this."
+
+"The man says," Fardell continued, stonily, "that his name is Parkins,
+and that he was butler to Mr. Stephen Phillimore eleven years ago."
+
+"Parkins is dead!" Mannering said, hoarsely. "He has been dead for many
+years."
+
+"He is living in Leeds to-day," Fardell answered. "A journalist from the
+_Yorkshire Herald_ was with him for two hours this afternoon."
+
+"Blanche--I was told that he was dead," Mannering said.
+
+"Then the story is true?" Fardell asked.
+
+"Not as you have told it," Mannering answered.
+
+"There is truth in it?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+Richard Fardell was silent for several moments. He paced up and down the
+room, his hands behind his back, his eyebrows contracted into a heavy
+frown. For him it was a bitter moment. He was only a half-educated,
+illiterate man, possessed of sturdy common sense and a wonderful tenacity
+of purpose. He had permitted himself to indulge in a little silent but
+none the less absolute hero-worship, and Mannering had been the hero.
+
+"You must come with me at once and see this man," he said at last. "He
+has not yet signed his statement. We must do what we can to keep him
+quiet."
+
+Mannering took up his coat and hat without a word. They left the hotel,
+and Fardell summoned a cab.
+
+"It is a long way," he explained. "We will drive part of the distance and
+walk the rest. We may be watched already."
+
+Mannering nodded. The last blow was so unexpected that he felt in a sense
+numbed. His speech only a few hours ago had made large inroads upon his
+powers of endurance. His partial recantation had cost him many hours of
+torture, from which he was still suffering. And now, without the
+slightest warning, he found himself face to face with a crisis far
+graver, far more acute. Never in his most gloomy moments had he felt any
+real fear of a resurrection of the past such as that with which he was
+now threatened. It was a thunderbolt from a clear sky. Even now he found
+it hard to persuade himself that he was not dreaming.
+
+They were in the cab for nearly half an hour before Fardell stopped and
+dismissed it. Then they walked up and down and across streets of small
+houses, pitiless in their monotony, squalid and depressing in their
+ugliness.
+
+Finally Fardell stopped, and without hesitation knocked at the door of
+one of them. It was opened by a man in shirt-sleeves, holding a tallow
+candle in his hand.
+
+"What yer want?" he inquired, suspiciously.
+
+"Your lodger," Fardell answered, pushing past him and drawing Mannering
+into the room. "Where is he?"
+
+The man jerked his thumb upwards.
+
+"Where he won't be long," he answered, shortly. "The likes of 'im having
+visitors, and one a toff, too. Say, are yer going to pay his rent?"
+
+"We may do that," Fardell answered. "Is he upstairs?"
+
+"Ay!" the man answered, shuffling away. "Pay 'is rent, and yer can chuck
+'im out of the winder, if yer like!"
+
+They climbed the crazy staircase. Fardell opened the door of the room
+above without even the formality of knocking. An old man sat there,
+bending over a table, half dressed. Before him were several sheets of
+paper.
+
+"I believe we're in time," Fardell muttered, half to himself. "Parkins,
+is that you?" he asked, in a louder tone.
+
+The old man looked up and blinked at them. He shaded his eyes with one
+hand. The other he laid flat upon the papers before him. He was old,
+blear-eyed, unkempt.
+
+"Is that Master Ronaldson?" he asked, in a thin, quavering tone. "I've
+signed 'em, sir. Have yer brought the money? I'm a poor old man, and I
+need a drop of something now and then to keep the life in me. If yer'll
+just hand over a trifle I'll send out for--eh--eh, my landlord, he's a
+kindly man--he'll fetch it. Eh? Two of yer! I don't see so well as I
+did. Is that you, Mr. Ronaldson, sir?"
+
+Fardell threw some silver coins upon the table. The old man snatched them
+up eagerly.
+
+"It's not Mr. Ronaldson," he said, "but I daresay we shall do as well. We
+want to talk to you about those papers there."
+
+The old man nodded. He was gazing at the silver in his hand.
+
+"I've writ it all out," he muttered. "I told 'un I would. A pound a week
+for ten years. That's what I 'ad! And then it stopped! Did she mean me to
+starve, eh? Not I! John Parkins knows better nor that. I've writ it all
+out, and there's my signature. It's gospel truth, too."
+
+"We are going to buy the truth from you," Fardell said. "We have more
+money than Ronaldson. Don't be afraid. We have gold to spare where
+Ronaldson had silver."
+
+The old man lifted the candle with shaking fingers. Then it dropped with
+a crash to the ground, and lay there for a moment spluttering. He shrank
+back.
+
+"It's 'im!" he muttered. "Don't kill me, sir. I mean you no harm. It's
+Mr. Mannering!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V
+
+THE JOURNALIST INTERVENES
+
+
+The old man had sunk into a seat. His face and hands were twitching with
+fear. His eyes, as though fascinated, remained fixed upon Mannering's.
+All the while he mumbled to himself. Fardell drew Mannering a little on
+one side.
+
+"What can we do with him?" he asked. "We might tear up those sheets, give
+him money, keep him soddened with drink. And even then he'd give the
+whole show away the moment any one got at him. It isn't so bad as he
+makes out, I suppose?"
+
+"It is not so bad as that," Mannering answered, "but it is bad enough."
+
+"What became of the woman?" Fardell asked. "Parkins's mistress, I mean?"
+
+"She is my wife," Mannering answered.
+
+Fardell threw out his hands with a little gesture of despair.
+
+"We must get him away from here," he said. "If Polden gets hold of him
+you might as well resign at once. It is dangerous for you to stay. He was
+evidently expecting that fellow Ronaldson to-night."
+
+Mannering nodded.
+
+"What shall you do with him?" he asked.
+
+"Hide him if I can," Fardell answered, grimly. "If I can get him out of
+this place, it ought not to be impossible. The most important thing at
+present is for you to get away without being recognized."
+
+Mannering took up his hat.
+
+"I will go," he said. "I shall leave the cab for you. I can find my way
+back to the hotel."
+
+Fardell nodded.
+
+"It would be better," he said. "Turn your coat-collar up and draw your
+hat down over your eyes. You mustn't be recognized down here. It's a
+pretty low part."
+
+Nevertheless, Mannering had not reached the corner of the street before
+he heard hasty footsteps behind him, and felt a light touch upon his
+shoulder. He turned sharply round.
+
+"Well, sir!" he exclaimed, "what do you want with me?"
+
+The newcomer was a tall, thin young man, wearing glasses, and although he
+was a complete stranger to Mannering, he knew at once who he was.
+
+"Mr. Mannering, I believe?" he said, quickly.
+
+"What has my name to do with you, sir?" Mannering answered, coldly.
+
+"Mine is Ronaldson," the young man answered. "I am a reporter."
+
+Mannering regarded him steadily for a moment.
+
+"You are the young man, then," he said, "who has discovered the mare's
+nest of my iniquity."
+
+"If it is a mare's nest," the young man answered, briskly, "I shall be
+quite as much relieved as disappointed. But your being down here doesn't
+look very much like that, does it?"
+
+"No man," Mannering answered, "hears that a bomb is going to be thrown at
+him without a certain amount of curiosity as to its nature. I have been
+down to examine the bomb. Frankly, I don't think much of it."
+
+"You are prepared, then, to deny this man Parkins's story?" the reporter
+asked.
+
+"I am prepared to have a shot at your paper for libel, anyhow, if you use
+it," Mannering answered.
+
+"Do you know the substance of his communication?"
+
+"I can make a pretty good guess at it," Mannering answered.
+
+"You really mean to deny it, then?" the reporter asked.
+
+"Assuredly, for it is not true," Mannering answered. "Pray don't let me
+detain you any longer!"
+
+He turned on his heel and walked away, but the reporter kept pace with
+him.
+
+"You will pardon me, but this is a very serious affair, Mr. Mannering,"
+he said. "Serious for both of us. Do you mind discussing it with me?"
+
+"Not in the least," Mannering answered, "so long as you permit me to
+continue my way homewards."
+
+"I will walk with you, sir, if you don't mind," the reporter said. "It is
+a very serious matter indeed, this! My people are as keen as possible to
+make use of it. If they do, and it turns out a true story, you, of
+course, will never sit for Leeds. And if on the other hand it is false,
+I shall get the sack!"
+
+"Well, it is false," Mannering said.
+
+"Some parts of it, perhaps," the young man answered, smoothly. "Not all,
+Mr. Mannering."
+
+"Old men are garrulous," Mannering remarked. "I expect you will find that
+your friend has been letting his tongue run away with him."
+
+"He has committed his statements to paper," Ronaldson remarked.
+
+"And signed them?"
+
+"He is willing to do so," the reporter answered. "I was to have fetched
+them away to-night."
+
+"You may be a little late," Mannering remarked.
+
+The _double entente_ in his tone did not escape Ronaldson's notice. He
+stopped short on the pavement.
+
+"So you have bought him," he remarked.
+
+Mannering glanced at him superciliously.
+
+"Will you pardon me," he said, "if I remark that this conversation has no
+particular interest for me? Don't let me bring you any further out of
+your way."
+
+Ronaldson took off his hat.
+
+"Very good, sir," he remarked. "I will wish you good-night!"
+
+Mannering pursued his way homeward with the briefest of farewells. The
+young reporter retraced his steps. Arrived at Parkins's lodgings he
+mounted the stairs, and found the room empty. He returned and interviewed
+the landlord. From him he only learned that Parkins had departed with one
+of two gentlemen who had come to see him that evening, and that they had
+paid his rent for him. The reporter was obliged to depart with no more
+satisfactory information. But next morning, before nine o'clock, he was
+waiting to see Mannering, and would not be denied. He was accompanied,
+too, by a person of no less importance than the editor of the _Yorkshire
+Herald_ himself.
+
+Mannering kept them waiting an hour, and then received them coolly.
+
+"I am glad to see you, Mr. Polden," he said, glancing at the editor's
+card. "I have already had some conversation with our young friend there,"
+he added, glancing towards the reporter. "What can I have the pleasure of
+doing for you?"
+
+Mr. Polden produced a sheet of proofs from his pocket. He passed them
+over to Mannering.
+
+"I should like you to examine these, sir," he said.
+
+"In type already!" Mannering remarked, calmly.
+
+"In proof for our evening's issue," Polden answered.
+
+Mannering read them through.
+
+"It will cost you several thousand pounds!" he said.
+
+"Then the money will be well spent," Polden answered. "No one has a
+higher regard for you politically than I have, Mr. Mannering, but we
+don't want you as member for West Leeds. That's all!"
+
+"It happens," Mannering said, "that I am particularly anxious to sit for
+West Leeds."
+
+"You will go on--in the face of this?" the editor asked Mannering.
+
+"Yes, and with the suit for libel which will follow," Mannering answered.
+
+The editor shrugged his shoulders.
+
+"Do me the favour to believe, Mr. Mannering," he said, "that we have not
+gone into this matter blindfold. We had a preliminary intimation as to
+this affair from a person whose word carries considerable weight, and our
+investigations have been searching. I will admit that the disappearance
+of the man Parkins is a little awkward for us, but we have ample
+justification in publishing his story."
+
+"I trust for your sakes that the law courts will support your views,"
+Mannering said, coldly. "I scarcely think it likely."
+
+"Mr. Mannering," Polden said, "I quite appreciate your attitude, but do
+you really think it is a wise one? I very much regret that it should have
+been our duty to unearth this unsavoury story, and having unearthed it,
+to use it. But you must remember that the issue on hand is a great one. I
+belong to the Liberal party and the absolute Free Traders, and I consider
+that for this city to be represented by any one who shows the least
+indication of being unsafe upon this question would be a national
+disaster and a local disgrace. I want you to understand, therefore, that
+I am not playing a game of bluff. The proofs you hold in your hand have
+been set and corrected. Within a few hours the story will stand out in
+black and white. Are you prepared for this?"
+
+Mannering shrugged his shoulders.
+
+"I am not prepared to resign my candidature, if that is what you mean,"
+he said. "I presume that nothing short of that will satisfy you?"
+
+"Nothing," the editor answered, firmly.
+
+"Then there remains nothing more," Mannering remarked, coldly, "than for
+me to wish you a very good-morning."
+
+"I am sorry," Mr. Polden said. "I trust you will believe, Mr. Mannering,
+that I find this a very unpleasant duty."
+
+Mannering made no answer save a slight bow. He held open the door, and
+Mr. Polden and his satellite passed out. Afterwards he strolled to the
+window and looked down idly upon the crowd.
+
+"If I act in accordance with the conventions," he murmured to himself, "I
+suppose I ought to take, a glass of poison, or blow my brains out.
+Instead of which--"
+
+He shrugged his shoulders, and rang for his hat and coat. He was due at
+one of the great foundries in half an hour to speak to the men during
+their luncheon interval.
+
+"Instead of which," he muttered, as he lit a cigarette, "I shall go on to
+the end."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI
+
+TREACHERY AND A TELEGRAM
+
+
+The sunlight streamed down into the little grey courtyard of the _Leon
+D'or_ at Bonestre. Sir Leslie Borrowdean, in an immaculate grey suit, and
+with a carefully chosen pink carnation in his button-hole, sat alone at a
+small table having his morning coffee. His attention was divided between
+a copy of the _Figaro_ and a little pile of letters and telegrams on the
+other side of his plate. More than once he glanced at the topmost of the
+latter and smiled.
+
+Mrs. Mannering and Hester came down the grey stone steps and crossed
+towards their own table. The former lingered for a moment as she passed
+Sir Leslie, who rose to greet the two women.
+
+"Another glorious day!" he remarked. "What news from Leeds?"
+
+"None," she said. "My husband seldom writes."
+
+Sir Leslie smiled reflectively, and glanced towards the pile of papers at
+his side.
+
+"Perhaps," she remarked, "you know better than I do how things are going
+there."
+
+He shook his head.
+
+"I have no correspondents in Leeds," he answered.
+
+At that moment a puff of wind disturbed the papers by his side. A
+telegram would have fluttered away, but Blanche Mannering caught it at
+the edge of the table. She was handing it back, when a curious expression
+on Borrowdean's face inspired her with a sudden idea. She deliberately
+looked at the telegram, and her fingers stiffened upon it. His forward
+movement was checked. She stood just out of his reach.
+
+"No correspondents in Leeds," she repeated. "Then what about this
+telegram?"
+
+"You will permit me to remind you," he said, stretching out his hand for
+it, "that it is addressed to me."
+
+Her hands were behind her. She leaned over towards him.
+
+"It can be addressed to you a thousand times over," she answered, "but
+before I part with it I want to know what it means."
+
+Borrowdean was thinking quickly. He wanted to gain time.
+
+"I do not even know which document you have--purloined," he said.
+
+"It is from Leeds," she answered, "and it is signed Polden. 'Parkins
+found, has made statement, appears to-night.' Can you explain what this
+means, Sir Leslie Borrowdean?"
+
+Her voice was scarcely raised above a whisper, but there was a dangerous
+glitter in her eyes. There were few traces left of the woman whom once
+before he had found so easy a tool.
+
+"I cannot tell you," he answered. "It is not an affair for you to concern
+yourself with at all."
+
+"Not an affair for me to concern myself about!" she repeated, leaning
+a little over towards him. "Isn't it my husband against whom you are
+scheming? Don't I know what low tricks you are capable of? Isn't this
+another proof of it? Not an affair for me to concern myself about,
+indeed! Didn't you worm the whole miserable story out of me?"
+
+"My dear Mrs. Mannering!"
+
+She checked a torrent of words. Her bosom was heaving underneath her lace
+blouse. She was pale almost to the lips. The sudden and complete disuse
+of all manner of cosmetics had to a certain extent blanched her face.
+There was room there now for the writing of tragedy. Borrowdean, still
+outwardly suave, was inwardly cursing the unlucky chance which had blown
+the telegram her way.
+
+"Might I suggest," he said, in a low tone, "that we postpone our
+conversation till after breakfast time? The waiters seem to be favouring
+us with a great deal of attention, and several of them understand
+English."
+
+She did not even turn her head. Thinner a good deal since her marriage,
+she seemed to him to have grown taller, to have gained in dignity and
+presence, as she stood there before him, her angry eyes fixed upon his
+face. She was no longer a person to be ignored.
+
+"You must tell me about this--or--"
+
+"Or?" he repeated, stonily.
+
+"Or I will make a public statement," she answered. "If you ruin my
+husband's career, I can at least do the same with yours. Politics is
+supposed to be a game for honourable men to play with honourable weapons.
+I wonder if Lord Redford would approve of your methods?"
+
+"You can go and ask him, my dear madam," he answered. "I am perfectly
+ready to defend myself."
+
+"Defend! You have no defence," she answered. "Can you deny that you are
+plotting to keep my husband out of Parliament now, just as a few months
+ago you plotted to bring him back? You are making use of a personal
+secret, a forgotten chapter of his life, to move him about like a puppet
+to do your will."
+
+"I work for the good of a cause and a great party," he answered. "You do
+not understand these things."
+
+"I understand you so far as this," she answered. "You are one of those to
+whom life is a chessboard, and your one aim is to make the pieces work
+for you, and at your bidding, till you sit in the place you covet. There
+isn't much of the patriot about you, Sir Leslie Borrowdean."
+
+He glanced down at his unfinished breakfast. He had the air of one who is
+a little bored.
+
+"My dear lady," he said, "is this discussion really worth while?"
+
+"No," she answered, bluntly, "it isn't. You are quite right. We are
+wandering from the subject."
+
+"Let us talk," he suggested, "after breakfast. Give me back that telegram
+now, and I will explain it, say, in the garden in half an hour. I detest
+cold coffee."
+
+"You can do like me, order some fresh," she said. "If I let you out of my
+sight I know very well how much I shall see of you for the rest of the
+day. Explain now if you can. What does that telegram mean?"
+
+"Surely it is obvious enough," he answered. "The man Parkins, whom you
+told me was dead, is alive and in Leeds. He has seen Mannering's name
+about, has been talking, and the press have got hold of his story. I am
+sorry, but there was always this possibility, wasn't there?"
+
+"And this telegram?" she asked.
+
+"I know Polden, the editor of the paper, and he referred to me to know if
+there could be any truth in it."
+
+"These are lies!" she declared. "You were the instigator. You set them on
+the track."
+
+"I have nothing more to say," Borrowdean declared, coldly.
+
+"I have," she said. "I shall take this telegram to Lord Redford. I shall
+tell him everything!"
+
+A faint smile flickered upon Borrowdean's lips.
+
+"Lord Redford would, I am sure, be charmed to hear your story," he
+remarked. "Unfortunately he started for Dieppe this morning before eight
+o'clock, and will not be back until to-morrow."
+
+"And to-morrow will be too late," she added, rapidly pursuing his train
+of thought. "Then I will try the Duchess!"
+
+He started very slightly, but she saw it.
+
+"Sit down for a moment, Mrs. Mannering," he said.
+
+She accepted the chair he placed for her. There was a distinct change in
+his manner. He realized that this woman held a trump card against him.
+Even in her hands it might mean disaster.
+
+"Blanche--" he began.
+
+"Thank you," she interrupted, "I prefer 'Mrs. Mannering.'"
+
+He bit his lips in annoyance.
+
+"Mrs. Mannering, then," he continued, "we have been allies before, and I
+think that you will admit that I have always kept faith with you. I don't
+see any reason why we should play at being enemies. You have a price, I
+suppose, for that telegram and your silence. Name it."
+
+She nodded.
+
+"Yes, I have a price," she admitted.
+
+"Remember that, after all, this is not a great issue," he said. "If your
+husband does not get in for Leeds he will probably find a seat somewhere
+else."
+
+"That is false," she answered, "If your man Polden publishes Parkins's
+story my husband's political career is over, and you know it. Do keep as
+near to the truth as you can."
+
+"I will give you," he said, "five hundred pounds for that telegram and
+your silence."
+
+She rose slowly to her feet. A dull flush of colour mounted almost to
+her eyes. Borrowdean watched her anxiously. Then for a moment came an
+interruption. The Duchess was descending the grey stone steps from the
+hotel.
+
+She had addressed some word of greeting to them. They both turned towards
+her. She wore a white serge dress, and she carried a white lace parasol
+over her bare head. She moved towards them with her usual languid grace,
+followed by her maid carrying a tiny Maltese dog and a budget of letters.
+The loiterrers in the courtyard stared at her with admiration. It was
+impossible to mistake her for anything but a great lady.
+
+"You have the air of conspirators, you two!" she said, as she approached
+them. "Is it an expedition for the day that you are planning?"
+
+Blanche Mannering turned her back upon Borrowdean.
+
+"Sir Leslie," she said, "has just offered me five hundred pounds for a
+telegram which I have here and for my silence concerning its contents.
+I was wondering whether he had bid high enough."
+
+The Duchess looked from one to the other. She almost permitted herself to
+be astonished. Borrowdean's face was dark with anger. Blanche Mannering's
+apparent calmness was obviously of the surface only.
+
+"Are you serious?" she asked.
+
+"Miserably so!" Blanche answered. "Sir Leslie has strange ideas of
+honour, I find. He is making use of a story which I told him once
+concerning my husband, to drive him out of political life. Duchess, will
+you do me the favour to let me talk with you for five minutes, and to
+make Sir Leslie Borrowdean promise not to leave this hotel till you have
+seen him again?"
+
+"I have no intention of leaving the hotel," Sir Leslie said, stiffly.
+
+Berenice pointed to her table.
+
+"Come and take your coffee with me, Mrs. Mannering," she said.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Mannering passed through the day like a man in a nightmare. He addressed
+two meetings of working-men, and interviewed half a dozen of his workers.
+At mid-day the afternoon edition of the _Yorkshire Herald_ was being sold
+in the streets. He bought a copy and glanced it feverishly through.
+Nothing! He lunched and went on with his work. At three o'clock a second
+edition was out. Again he purchased a copy, and again there was nothing.
+The suspense was getting worse even than the disaster itself. Between
+four and five they brought him in a telegram. He tore it open, and found
+that it was from Bonestre. The words seemed to stare up at him from the
+pink form. It was incredible:
+
+"Polden muzzled. Go in and win."
+
+The form fluttered from his fingers on to the floor of his sitting-room.
+He stood looking at it, dazed. Outside, a mob of people, standing round
+his carriage, were shouting his name.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII
+
+MR. MANNERING, M.P.
+
+
+Mannering threw up his window with a sigh of immense relief. The air was
+cold and fresh. The land, as yet unwarmed by the slowly rising sun, was
+hung with a faint autumn mist. Traces of an early frost lay in the brown
+hedgerows inland; the sea was like a sheet of polished glass. Gone the
+smoke-stained rows of shapeless houses, the atmosphere polluted by a
+thousand chimneys belching smuts and black vapour, the clanging of
+electric cars, the rattle of all manner of vehicles over the cobbled
+streets. Gone the hoarse excitement of the shouting mobs, the poisonous
+atmosphere of close rooms, all the turmoil and racket and anxiety of
+those fighting days. He was back again in Bonestre. Below in the
+courtyard the white cockatoo was screaming. The waiters in their linen
+coats were preparing the tables for the few remaining guests. And the
+other things were of yesterday!
+
+Mannering had arrived in the middle of the night unexpectedly, and his
+appearance was a surprise to every one. He had knocked at his wife's door
+on his way downstairs, but Blanche had taken to early rising, and was
+already down. He found them all breakfasting together in a sheltered
+corner of the courtyard.
+
+Berenice, after the usual greetings and explanations, smiled at him
+thoughtfully.
+
+"I am not sure," she said, "whether I ought to congratulate you or not.
+Sir Leslie here thinks that you mean mischief!"
+
+"Only on the principle," Borrowdean said, "that whoever is not with us is
+against us."
+
+"We are all agreed upon one thing," Berenice said. "It was your last
+speech, the one the night before the election, which carried you in. A
+national party indeed! A legislator, not a politician! You talked to
+those canny Yorkshiremen with your head in the clouds, and yet they
+listened."
+
+Mannering smiled as he poured out his coffee.
+
+"I talked common sense to them," he remarked, "and Yorkshiremen like
+that. We have been slaves to the old-fashioned idea of party Government
+long enough. It's an absurd thing when you come to think of it. Fancy a
+great business being carried on by a board of partners of divergent
+views, and unable to make a purchase or a sale or effect any change
+whatever without talking the whole thing threadbare, and then voting
+upon it. The business would go down, of course!"
+
+"Party Government," Borrowdean declared, "is the natural evolution of
+any republican form of administration. A nation that chooses its own
+representatives must select them from its varying standpoint."
+
+"Their views may differ slightly upon some matters," Mannering said,
+"but their first duty should be to come into accord with one another.
+It is a matter for compromises, of course. The real differences between
+intelligent men of either party are very slight. The trouble is that
+under the present system everything is done to increase them instead
+of bridging them over."
+
+"If you had to form a Government, then," Berenice asked, "you would not
+choose the members from one party?"
+
+"Certainly not," Mannering answered. "Supposing I were the owner of
+Redford's car there, and wanted a driver. I should simply try to get the
+best man I could, and I should certainly not worry as to whether he were,
+say, a churchman or a dissenter. The best man for the post is what the
+country has a right to expect, whatever he may call himself, and the
+country doesn't get it. The people pay the piper, and I consider that
+they get shocking bad value for their money. The Boer War, for instance,
+would have cost us less than half as much if we had had the right men to
+direct the commercial side of it. That money would have been useful in
+the country just now."
+
+"An absolute monarchy," Hester said, smiling, "would be really the most
+logical form of Government, then? But would it answer?"
+
+"Why not?" Borrowdean asked. "If the monarch were incapable he would of
+course be shot!"
+
+"A dictator--" Berenice began, but Mannering held out his hands,
+laughing.
+
+"Think of my last few days, and spare me!" he begged. "I have thirty-six
+hours' holiday. How do you people spend your time here?"
+
+Berenice took him away with her as a matter of course. Blanche watched
+them depart with a curious tightening of the lips. She was standing alone
+in the gateway of the hotel, and she watched them until they were out of
+sight. Borrowdean, sauntering out to buy some papers, paused for a moment
+as he passed.
+
+"Your husband, Mrs. Mannering," he said, drily, "is a very fortunate
+man."
+
+She made no reply, and Borrowdean passed on. Hester came out with a
+message from Lady Redford--would Mrs. Mannering care to motor over to
+Berneval for luncheon? Blanche shook her head. She scarcely heard the
+invitation. She was still watching the two figures disappearing in the
+distance. Hester understood, but she spoke lightly.
+
+"I believe," she said, "that the Duchess still has hopes of Mr.
+Mannering."
+
+"She is a persistent woman," Blanche answered. "They say that she
+generally succeeds. Let us go in."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Berenice was listening to Mannering's account of his last few days'
+electioneering.
+
+"The whole affair came upon me like a thunderclap," he told her. "Richard
+Fardell found it out somehow, and he took me to see Parkins. But it was
+too late. Polden had hold of the story and meant to use it. I never
+imagined but that Parkins had been talking and this journalist had got
+hold of him by accident. Now I understand that it was Borrowdean who was
+pulling the strings."
+
+She nodded.
+
+"He traced Parkins out some time ago, and knew exactly where he was to be
+found."
+
+"I think," Mannering said, "that it is time Borrowdean and I came to some
+understanding. I haven't said anything about it yet. I don't exactly know
+what to say now. You are a very generous woman."
+
+She sighed.
+
+"No," she said, "I don't think that. Sir Leslie is a schemer of the class
+I detest. I listened to him once, and I have regretted it ever since. Yet
+you must remember this! If it had not been for him you would have been at
+Blakely to-day."
+
+His thoughts carried him backwards with a rush. Once more the thrall of
+that quiet life of passionless sweetness held him. He looked back upon it
+curiously, as a man who has passed into another country. Days of physical
+exaltation, alone with the sun and the wind and all the murmuring voices
+of Nature, God's life he had called it then. And now! The stress of
+battle was hard upon him. He was fighting in the front ranks, a somewhat
+cheerless battle, fighting for great causes with inefficient weapons. But
+he could not go back. Life had become a more strenuous, a more vital, a
+less beautiful thing! He felt himself ageing. All the inevitable sadness
+of the man in touch with the world's great problems was in his heart. But
+he could not go back.
+
+"Yes," he said, quietly, "I owe that much to Borrowdean."
+
+"There is a question," she said, "which I have wanted to ask you. Do you
+regret, or are you glad to have been forced out once more upon the
+world's stage?"
+
+He smiled.
+
+"How can I answer you?" he asked. "At Blakely I was as happy as I knew
+how to be, and until you came I was content! But to-day, well, there are
+different things. How can I answer your question, indeed? Tell me what
+happiness means! Tell me whether it is an ignoble or a praiseworthy
+state!"
+
+Berenice was silent. Into her face there had come a sudden gravity.
+Mannering, glancing towards her, was at once conscious of the change. He
+saw the weariness so often and zealously repressed, the ageing of her
+face, the sudden triumph of the despair which in the quiet moments
+chilled her heart. It seemed to him that for that moment they had come
+into some closer communion. He bent over towards her.
+
+"Ah!" he murmured, "you, too, are beginning to understand. Happiness is
+only for the ignorant. For you and for me knowledge has eaten its way
+too far into our lives. We climb all the while, but the flowers in the
+meadows are the fairest."
+
+She shook her head.
+
+"The little white flower which grows in the mountains is what we must
+always seek," she answered. "The meadows are for the others."
+
+"We are accursed with this knowledge, and the desire for it," he
+declared, fiercely. "The suffering is for us, and the joy for the beasts
+of the field. Why not throw down the cards? We are the devil's puppets in
+this game of life."
+
+"There is no place for us down there," she answered, sadly. "There is joy
+enough for them, because the finger has never touched their eyes. But for
+us--no, we have to go on! I was a foolish woman, Lawrence. I lost my
+sense of proportion. Traditions, you see, were hard to break away from. I
+did not understand. Let this be the end of all mention of such things
+between us. We have missed the turning, and we must go on. That is the
+hardest thing in life. One can never retrace one's steps."
+
+"We go on--apart?"
+
+"We must," she said. "Don't think me prejudiced, Lawrence. I must stand
+by my party. Theoretically, I think that you are the only logical
+politician I have ever known. Actually, I think that you are steering
+your course towards the sandbanks. You will fail, but you will fail
+magnificently. Well, that is something."
+
+"It is a good deal," he answered, "but if I live long enough, and my
+strength remains, I shall succeed. I shall place the Government of
+this country upon an altogether different basis. I shall empty the
+work-houses and fill the factories. Nothing short of that will content
+me. Nothing short of that would content any man upon whose shoulders the
+burden has fallen."
+
+"You have centuries of prejudice to fight," she warned him. "You may not
+succeed! Yet you have all my good wishes. I shall always watch you."
+
+They turned homeward in silence. All that had passed between them seemed
+to be already far back in the past. Their retrogression seemed almost
+symbolical. They spoke of indifferent things.
+
+"Tell me," he asked, "how you came to know what was going on in Leeds."
+
+"It was your wife," she said, "who discovered it!"
+
+"My wife?"
+
+"She saw a telegram on Sir Leslie's table at breakfast, a telegram from
+the man Polden. She read it and demanded an explanation. Sir Leslie tried
+all he could to wriggle out of it, but in vain. She appealed to me. Even
+I had a great deal of difficulty in dealing with him, but eventually he
+gave way."
+
+"Then the telegram," Mannering asked, "wasn't that from you?"
+
+She shook her head.
+
+"It was from your wife," she said. "I cannot take much credit for myself.
+It is she whom you must thank for your election. I came out at rather
+a dramatic moment. Sir Leslie had just offered her money, five hundred
+pounds, I think, to give him back his telegram and say nothing. She
+appealed to me at once, and Sir Leslie looked positively foolish."
+
+"I am much obliged to you for telling me," Mannering muttered. He
+remembered now that he had scarcely spoken a dozen words to his wife
+since his return.
+
+"Mrs. Mannering appears to have your interests very much at heart,"
+Berenice said, quietly. "She proved herself quite a match for Sir Leslie.
+I think that he would have left here at once, only we are expecting Clara
+back."
+
+Mannering smiled scornfully.
+
+"I do not think that even Clara," he said, "is quite fool enough not to
+recognize in Borrowdean the arrant opportunist. For my part I am glad
+that all pretence at friendship between us is now at an end. He is one
+of those men whom I should count more dangerous as a friend than as an
+enemy."
+
+Berenice did not reply. They were already in the courtyard of the hotel.
+Blanche was in a wicker chair in a sunny corner, talking to a couple of
+young Englishmen. Berenice turned towards the steps. They parted without
+any further words.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII
+
+PLAYING THE GAME
+
+
+Mannering for a moment hesitated. One of the two young men who were
+talking to his wife he recognized as a former acquaintance of hers--one
+of a genus whom he had little sympathy with and less desire to know.
+While he stood there Blanche laughed at some remark made by one of her
+companions, and the laugh, too, seemed somehow to remind him of the old
+days. He moved slowly forward.
+
+The young men strolled off almost at once. Mannering took a vacant chair
+by his wife's side.
+
+"I have only just heard," he said, "how much I have to thank you for. I
+took it for granted somehow that it was the Duchess who had discovered
+our friend Borrowdean's little scheme and sent that telegram. Why didn't
+you sign it?"
+
+She shrugged her shoulders.
+
+"It was the Duchess who made him chuck it up," she said. "I could never
+have made him do that. I was an idiot to let Parkins stay in England at
+all."
+
+"I always understood," he said, "that he was dead."
+
+"I let you think so," she answered. "I thought you might worry. But
+seriously, if he told the truth, now, after all these years, would any
+one take any notice of it?"
+
+"Very likely not," he said, "so far as regards any criminal
+responsibility. But our political life is fenced about by all the
+middle-class love of propriety and hatred of all form of scandal.
+Parkins's story, authenticated or not, would have lost me my seat
+for Leeds."
+
+"Then I am very glad," she said, "that I happened to see the telegram. Do
+you know where Parkins is now?"
+
+"One of my supporters," he said, "a queer little man named Richard
+Fardell, has him in tow. He is bringing him up to London, I think."
+
+She nodded.
+
+"What are you doing this afternoon?" he asked.
+
+She looked at him curiously.
+
+"Mr. Englehall has asked me to go out in his car," she said. "I am rather
+tired of motoring, but I think I shall go."
+
+Mannering lit a cigarette which he had just taken from his case.
+
+"I don't think I should," he remarked.
+
+She turned her head slowly, and looked at him.
+
+"Why not?" she asked. "How can it concern you? Your plans for the
+afternoon are, I presume, already made!"
+
+"It may not concern me directly," he answered, "but I have an idea that
+Mr. Englehall is not exactly the sort of person I care to have you
+driving about with."
+
+She laughed hardly.
+
+"I am most flattered by your interest in me," she declared. "Pray
+consider Mr. Englehall disposed of. You have some other plans, perhaps?"
+
+"If you care to," he said, "we will walk down to the club for lunch and
+come home by the sea."
+
+"Alone?"
+
+"Certainly! Unless you choose to bring Hester."
+
+She rose slowly to her feet.
+
+"No," she said. "Let us go alone. It will be almost the first time since
+we were married, I think. I am curious to see how much I can bore you!
+Will you wait here while I find a hat?"
+
+She disappeared inside the hotel. Mannering watched her absently. In
+a vague sort of way he was wondering what it was that had made their
+married life so completely a failure. He had imagined her as asking very
+little from him, content with the shelter of his name and home, content
+at any rate without those things of which he had made no mention when he
+had spoken to her of marriage. And he was becoming gradually aware that
+it was not so. She expected, had hoped for more. The terms which he had
+zealously striven to cultivate with her were terms of which she clearly
+did not approve. The signs of revolt were already apparent.
+
+Mannering became absorbed in thought. He remembered clearly the feelings
+with which he had gone to her and made his offer. He went over it all
+again. Surely he had made himself understood? But then there was her
+confession to him, the confession of her love. He had ignored that, but
+it was unforgetable. Had he not tacitly accepted the whole situation? If
+so, was he doing his duty? The shelter of his name and home, what were
+those to a warm-hearted woman, if she loved him? He had married her,
+loving another woman. She must have known this, but did she understand
+that he was not prepared to make any effort to accept the inevitable? He
+was still deep in thought when Berenice came out.
+
+"What are you doing there all by yourself?" she asked. "Where is your
+wife?"
+
+"She has gone to get a hat," he answered. "We thought of going to the
+club for _déjeuner_."
+
+She nodded.
+
+"A delightful idea," she said. "Do invite me, and I will take you in the
+car. Mrs. Mannering likes motoring, I know."
+
+"Of course!" he said. "We shall be delighted!"
+
+She beckoned to her chauffer, who was in the courtyard. Just then Blanche
+came out. She had changed her gown for one of plain white serge, and she
+wore a hat of tuscan straw which Mannering had once admired.
+
+"You won't mind motoring, Mrs. Mannering?" Berenice said, as she
+approached. "I have invited myself to luncheon with you, and I am going
+to take you round to the club in the car."
+
+Blanche stood quite still for a moment. The sun was in her eyes, and she
+lowered her parasol for a moment.
+
+"It will be very pleasant," she said, quietly, "only I think that I will
+go in and change my hat. I thought that we were going to walk."
+
+She retraced her steps, walking a little wearily. Berenice came and sat
+down by Mannering's side.
+
+"I hope Mrs. Mannering does not object to my coming," she said. "It
+occurred to me that she was not particularly cordial."
+
+"It is only her manner," he answered. "It is very good of you to take
+us."
+
+"Your wife doesn't like me," Berenice said. "I wonder why. I thought that
+I had been rather decent to her."
+
+"Blanche is a little odd," Mannering answered. "I am afraid that it is my
+fault. Here are the Redfords. I wonder if they would join us."
+
+"Three," she murmured, "is certainly an awkward number."
+
+In the end the party became rather a large one, for Lord Redford met some
+old friends at the club who insisted upon their joining tables. In the
+interval, whilst they waited for luncheon, Mannering contrived to have
+a word alone with his wife.
+
+"I am not responsible," he said, "for this enlargement of our party. The
+Duchess invited herself."
+
+"It does not matter," she declared, listlessly. "What are you doing
+afterwards?"
+
+"Playing golf, I fancy," he answered. "You heard what Redford said about
+a foursome."
+
+"And you are returning--when?"
+
+"I must leave here at six to-morrow morning."
+
+They were leaning over the white palings of the pavilion, looking out
+upon the last green. She seemed to be watching the approach of two
+players who were just coming in.
+
+"It is a long way to come," she remarked, "for so short a time."
+
+He shrugged his shoulders.
+
+"The aftermath of a contested election is a thing to escape from," he
+said. "I felt that I wanted to get as far away as possible, and then
+again I wanted to find out who it was who had sent that telegram."
+
+They sat apart at luncheon, and Blanche was much quieter than usual. The
+others were all old friends. It seemed to her more than ordinarily
+apparent that she was present on sufferance, accepted as Mannering's
+wife, as an evil to be endured, and, so far as possible, ignored.
+Mannering himself spoke to her now and then across the table. Lord
+Redford, always good-natured, made a few efforts to draw her into the
+conversation. But it seemed to her that she had lost her confidence. The
+freemasonry of old acquaintance which existed between all of them left
+her outside an invisible but very real circle. Words came to her with
+difficulty. She felt stupid, almost shy. When she made an effort to break
+through it she was acutely conscious of her failure. Her laugh was too
+hard, it lacked sincerity or restraint. The cigarette which she smoked
+out of bravado with her coffee, seemed somehow out of place. When at last
+luncheon was over Mannering left his place and came over to her.
+
+"The Duchess and I," he said, "are going to play Lord Redford and Mrs.
+Arbuthnot. Won't you walk round with us? The links are really very
+pretty."
+
+"Thanks, I hate watching golf," she answered, rising and shaking out her
+skirt. "Hester and I will walk home."
+
+"Do take the car, Mrs. Mannering," Berenice said. "It will simply be
+waiting here doing nothing."
+
+"Thank you," Blanche answered. "I shall enjoy the walk."
+
+The foursome was played in very leisurely fashion. There was plenty of
+time for conversation.
+
+"I don't quite understand your wife," Berenice said to Mannering. "Her
+dislike of me is a little too obvious. What does it mean? Do you know?"
+
+He shook his head. He was looking very pale and tired.
+
+"I am not sure that I know anything about it at all," he said. "I am
+beginning to distrust my own judgment."
+
+"Your marriage--" she began, thoughtfully.
+
+"Don't let us talk about it," he interrupted. "I tried to pay a debt.
+It seems to me that I have only incurred a fresh one."
+
+They were silent for some time. Then their opponents lost a ball and
+displayed no particular diligence in attempting to find it. Berenice sat
+down upon a plank seat.
+
+"Your marriage," she said, "seemed always to me a piece of quixotism.
+I never altogether understood it."
+
+"It was an affair of impulse," he said, slowly. "Life from a personal
+point of view had lost all interest to me. I did not dream after
+my--shall we call it apostacy?--that I could rely upon even a modicum
+of your friendship. I looked upon myself as an outcast commencing life
+afresh. Then chance intervened. I thought I saw my way to making some
+atonement to a woman whose life I had certainly helped to ruin. That was
+where the serious part of the mistake came. I thought what I had to offer
+would be sufficient. I am beginning now to doubt it."
+
+"And what are you going to do?" she asked, looking steadily away from
+him.
+
+"Heaven knows," he answered, bitterly. "I cannot give what I do not
+possess."
+
+Was it his fancy, or was there a gleam of satisfaction about her still,
+pale face? He went on.
+
+"I don't want to play the hypocrite. On the other hand I don't want all
+that I have done to go for nothing. Can you advise me?"
+
+"No, nor any one else," she answered, softly.
+
+"Yet I can perhaps correct a little your point of view. I think that you
+overestimate your indebtedness to the woman whom you have made your wife.
+Her husband was a weak, dissipated creature and he was a doomed man long
+before that unfortunate day. It is even very questionable whether that
+scene in which you figured had anything whatever to do in hastening his
+death. That is a good many years ago, and ever since then you seem to
+have impoverished yourself to find her the means to live in luxury. I
+consider that you paid your debt over and over again, and that your final
+act of self-abnegation was entirely uncalled for. What more she wants
+from you I do not know. Perhaps I can imagine."
+
+There was a moment's silence. She turned her head and looked at
+him--looked him in the eyes unshamed, yet with her secret shining there
+for him to see.
+
+"There may be others, Lawrence," she said, "to whom you owe something. A
+woman cannot take back what she has given. There may be sufferers in the
+world whom you ought also to consider. And a woman loves to think that
+what she may not have herself is at least kept sacred--to her memory."
+
+"Fore!" cried Lord Redford, who had found his ball. "Awfully decent of
+you people to wait so long. We were afraid you meant to claim the hole!"
+
+Mannering rose to play his shot.
+
+"The Duchess and I, Lord Redford," he said, lightly, "scorn to take small
+advantages. We mean to play the game!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX
+
+THE TRAGEDY OF A KEY
+
+
+Blanche, in a plain black net gown, sat on Lord Redford's right hand at
+the hastily improvised dinner party that evening. Berenice, more subtly
+and more magnificently dressed, was opposite, by Mannering's side. The
+conversation seemed mostly to circle about them.
+
+"A very charming place," Lord Redford declared. "I have enjoyed my stay
+here thoroughly. Let us hope that we may all meet here again next year,"
+he added, raising his glass. "Mannering, you will drink to that, I hope?"
+
+"With all my heart," Mannering answered. "And you, Blanche?"
+
+She raised her almost untasted glass and touched it with her lips. She
+set it down with a faint smile. Berenice moved her head towards him.
+
+"Your wife is not very enthusiastic," she remarked.
+
+"She neither plays golf nor bathes," Mannering said. "It is possible that
+she finds it a little dull."
+
+"Both are habits which it is possible to acquire," Berenice answered. "I
+am telling your husband, Mrs. Mannering," she continued, "that you ought
+to learn to play golf."
+
+"Lawrence has offered to teach me more than once," Blanche answered,
+calmly. "I am afraid that games do not attract me. Besides, I am too old
+to learn!"
+
+"My dear Mrs. Mannering!" Lord Redford protested.
+
+"I am forty-two," Blanche replied, "and at that age a woman thinks twice
+before she begins anything new in the shape of vigorous exercise.
+Besides, I find plenty to amuse me here."
+
+"Might one ask in what direction?" Berenice murmured. "I have found in
+the place many things that are delightful, but not amusing."
+
+"I find amusement often in watching my neighbours," Blanche said. "I like
+to ask myself what it is they want, and to study their way of attaining
+it. You generally find that every one is fairly transparent when once you
+have found the key--and everybody is trying for something which they
+don't care for other people to know about."
+
+The Duchess looked at Blanche steadily. There was a certain insolence,
+the insolence of her aristocratic birth and assured position in the level
+stare of her clear brown eyes. But Blanche did not flinch.
+
+"I had no idea, Mrs. Mannering, that you had tastes of that sort,"
+Berenice said, languidly. "Suppose you give us a few examples."
+
+"Not for the world," Blanche answered, fervently. "Did you say that we
+were to have coffee outside, Lord Redford? How delightful! I wonder if
+Lady Redford is ready."
+
+They all trooped out in a minute or two. Berenice laid her hand upon
+Mannering's arm.
+
+"Your wife," she said, quietly, "is going a little too far. She is
+getting positively rude to me!"
+
+Mannering muttered some evasive reply. He, too, had marked the note of
+battle in Blanche's tone. He had noticed, too, the unusual restraint of
+her manner. She had drunk little or no wine at dinner time, and she had
+talked quietly and sensibly. Directly they reached the courtyard she
+seated herself on a settee for two, and made room for him by her side.
+
+"Come and tell me about the golf match," she said. "Who won?"
+
+Mannering had no alternative but to obey. Lady Redford, however, drew her
+chair up close to theirs, and the conversation was always general.
+Berenice in a few minutes rose to her feet.
+
+"Listen to the sea," she exclaimed. "Don't some of you want to come down
+to the rocks and watch it?"
+
+Blanche rose up at once.
+
+"Do come, Lawrence, if you are not too tired!" she said.
+
+The whole party trooped out on to the promenade. Blanche passed her arm
+through her husband's, and calmly appropriated him.
+
+"You can walk with whom you please presently, Lawrence," she said, "but
+I want you for a few minutes. I suppose you will admit that I have some
+claim?"
+
+"Certainly," Mannering answered. "I have never denied it."
+
+"I am your wife," Blanche said, "though heaven knows why you ever married
+me. The Duchess is, I suppose, the woman whom you would have married if
+you hadn't got into a mess with your politics. She is a very attractive
+woman, and you married me, of course, out of pity, or some such maudlin
+reason. But all the same I am here, and--I don't care what you do when
+I can't see you, but I won't have her make love to you before my face."
+
+"The Duchess is not that sort of woman, Blanche," Mannering said,
+gravely.
+
+"Isn't she?" Blanche remarked, unconvinced. "Well, I've watched her, and
+in my opinion she isn't very different from any other sort of woman. Do
+you wish you were free very much? I know she does!"
+
+"Is there any object to be gained by this conversation?" Mannering asked.
+"Frankly, I don't like it. I made you no absurd promises when I married
+you. I think that you understood the position very well. So far as I know
+I have given you no cause to complain."
+
+They had reached the end of the promenade. Blanche leaned over the rail.
+Her eyes seemed fixed upon a light flashing and disappearing across the
+sea. Mannering stood uncomfortably by her side.
+
+"No cause to complain!" she repeated, as though to herself. "No,
+I suppose not. And yet, how much the better off do you think I am,
+Lawrence? I had friends before of some sort or another. Some of them
+pretended to like me, even if they didn't. I did as I chose. I lived as I
+liked. I was my own mistress. And now--well, there is no one! I enjoy the
+respectability of your name, the privilege of knowing your friends, the
+ability to pay my bills, but I should go stark mad if it wasn't for
+Hester. I gave myself away to you, I know. You married me for pity, I
+know. But what in God's name do I get out of it?"
+
+A note of real passion quivered in her tone. Mannering looked down at her
+helplessly, taken wholly aback, without the power for a moment to
+formulate his thoughts. There was a touch of colour in her pale cheeks,
+her eyes were lit with an unusual fire. The faint moonlight was kind to
+her. Her features, thinner than they had been, seemed to have gained a
+certain refinement. She reminded him more than ever before of the Blanche
+of many years ago. He answered her kindly, almost tenderly.
+
+"I am very sorry," he said, "if I have caused you any suffering. What I
+did I did for the best. I don't think that I quite understood, and I
+thought that you knew--what had come into my life."
+
+"I knew that you cared for her, of course," she answered, with a little
+sob, "but I did not know that you meant to nurse it--that feeling. I
+thought that when we were married you would try to care for me--a little.
+I--Here are the others!"
+
+Lord Redford, who had failed to amuse Berenice, and who had a secret
+preference for the woman who generally amused him, broke up their
+_tête-à-tête_. He led Blanche away, and Mannering followed with Berenice.
+
+"What does this change in your wife mean?" she asked, abruptly.
+
+"Change?" he repeated.
+
+"Yes! She watches us! If it were not too absurd, one would believe her
+jealous. Of course, it is not my business to ask you on what terms you
+are with your wife, but--"
+
+"You know what terms," he interrupted.
+
+Her manner softened. She looked at him for a moment and then her eyes
+dropped.
+
+"I am rather a hateful woman!" she said, slowly. "I wish I had not said
+that. I don't think we have managed things very cleverly, Lawrence.
+Still, I suppose life is made up of these sorts of idiotic blunders."
+
+"Mine," he said, "has been always distinguished by them."
+
+"And mine," she said, "only since I came to Blakely, and learnt to talk
+nonsense in your rose-garden! But come," she added, more briskly, "we are
+breaking our compact. We agreed to be friends, you know, and abjure
+sentiment."
+
+He nodded.
+
+"It seemed quite easy then," he remarked.
+
+"And it is easy now! It must be," she added. "I have scarcely
+congratulated you upon your election. What it all means, and with which
+party you are going to vote, I scarcely know even now. But I can at least
+congratulate you personally."
+
+"You are generous," he said, "for I suppose I am a deserter. As to where
+I shall sit, it is very hard to tell. I fancy myself that we are on the
+eve of a complete readjustment of parties. Wherever I may find myself,
+however, it will scarcely be with your friends."
+
+She nodded.
+
+"I realize that, and I am sorry," she said. "All that we need is a
+leader, and you might have been he. As it is, I suppose we shall muddle
+along somehow until some one comes out of the ruck strong enough to pull
+us together.... Come and see me in London, Lawrence. Who knows but that
+you may be able to convert me!"
+
+"You are too staunch," he answered, "and you have not seen what I have
+seen."
+
+She sighed.
+
+"Didn't you once tell me at Blakely that politics for a woman was a
+mischosen profession--that we were at once too obstinate and too
+sentimental? Perhaps you were right. We don't come into touch with
+the same forces that you meet with, and we come into touch with others
+which make the world seem curiously upside-down. Good-night, Lawrence!
+I am going to my room quietly. Lady Redford wants to play bridge, and I
+don't feel like it! _Bon voyage!_"
+
+Mannering stood alone in the little courtyard, lit now with hanging
+lights, and crowded with stray visitors who had strolled in from the
+streets. The rest of the party had gone into the salon beyond, and
+Mannering felt curiously disinclined to join them. Suddenly there was a
+touch upon his arm. He turned round. Blanche was standing there looking
+up at him. Something in her face puzzled him. Her eyes fell before his.
+She was pale, yet as he looked at her a flood of colour rushed into her
+cheeks. His momentary impression of her eyes was that they were very soft
+and very bright. She had thrown off her wrap, and with her left hand was
+holding up her white skirt. Her right hand was clenched as though holding
+something, and extended timidly towards him.
+
+"I wanted to say good-night to you--and--there was something else--this!"
+
+Something passed from her hand to his, something cold and hard. He looked
+at her in amazement, but she was already on her way up the grey stone
+steps which led from the courtyard into the hotel, and she did not turn
+back. He opened his hand and stared at what he found there. It was a
+key--number forty-four, _Premier étage_.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X
+
+BLANCHE FINDS A WAY OUT
+
+
+Mannering was conscious of an overpowering desire to be alone. He made
+his way out of the courtyard and back to the promenade. Some of the
+lights were already extinguished, and a slight drizzling rain was
+falling. He walked at once to the further wall, and stood leaning over,
+looking into the chaos of darkness. The key, round which his fingers
+were still tightly clenched, seemed almost to burn his flesh.
+
+What to do? How much more of himself was he bound to surrender? Through a
+confusion of thoughts some things came to him then very clearly. Amongst
+others the grim, pitiless selfishness of his life. How much must she have
+suffered before she had dared to do this thing! He had taken up a burden
+and adjusted the weight to suit himself. He had had no thought for her,
+no care save that the seemliness of his own absorbed life might not be
+disturbed. And behind it all the other reason. What a pigmy of a man he
+was, after all.
+
+A clock from the town struck eleven. He must decide! A vision of her rose
+up before him. He understood now her weakness and her strength. She was
+an ordinary woman, seeking the affection her sex demanded from its
+legitimate source. He understood the coming and going of the colour in
+her cheeks, her strained attempts to please, her barely controlled
+jealousy. In that mad moment when he had planned for her salvation he had
+imagined that she would have understood. What folly! Why should she? The
+complex workings of his innermost nature were scarcely likely to have
+been patent to her. What right had he to build upon that? What right, as
+an honest man, to contract a debt he never meant to pay? If he had not at
+the moment realized his responsibilities that was his own fault. From her
+point of view they were obvious enough, and it was from her point of view
+as well as his own that they must be considered.
+
+He turned back to the hotel, walking a little unsteadily. All the time he
+was not sure that this was not a dream. And then on the wet pavement he
+came face to face with two cloaked figures, one of whom stopped short and
+called him by name. It was Berenice!
+
+"You!" he exclaimed, more than ever sure that he was not properly awake.
+
+"Is it so wonderful?" she answered. "To tell you the truth, I was not
+sleepy, and I felt like a little walk. You can go back now, Bryan," she
+said, turning to her maid. "Mr. Mannering will see me home."
+
+As though by mutual consent they crossed to the sea-wall.
+
+"What made you come out again?" she asked. "No, don't answer me! I think
+that I know."
+
+"Impossible," he murmured.
+
+"I was going up to my room," she said, "and as I passed the landing
+window which looks into the courtyard I saw you talking to your wife.
+I--I am afraid that I watched. I saw her leave you."
+
+"Yes!"
+
+"What was it that she gave you? What is it that you have in your hand?"
+
+He opened his fingers. She turned her head away. It seemed to him an
+eternity that she stood there. When she spoke her voice was scarcely more
+than a whisper.
+
+"Lawrence," she said, "we have been very selfish, you and I! There have
+been no words between us, but I think the compact has been there all the
+same. It seemed to me somehow that it was a compensation, that it was
+part of the natural order of things, that as our own folly had kept us
+apart, you should still belong to me--in my thoughts. And I have no right
+to this, or any share of you, Lawrence."
+
+He drew a little nearer to her. She moved instantly away.
+
+"I am glad," she said, "that our party breaks up to-morrow. When we meet
+again, Lawrence, it must be differently. I am parting with a great deal
+that has been precious to me, but it must be. It is quite clear."
+
+"I made no promise!" he cried, hoarsely. "I did not mean--"
+
+She stopped him with a swift glance.
+
+"Never mind that. You and I are not of the race of people who shrink from
+their duty, or fear to do what is right. Your wife's face taught me mine.
+Your conscience will tell you yours."
+
+"You mean?" he exclaimed.
+
+"You know what I mean. We shall meet again, of course, but this is none
+the less our farewell. No, don't touch me! Not even my hand, Lawrence.
+Don't make it any harder. Let us go in."
+
+But he did not move. The place where they stood was deserted. From below
+the white spray came leaping up almost to their faces as the waves beat
+against the wall. Behind them the town was black and deserted, save where
+a few lights gleamed out from the hotel. She shivered a little, and drew
+her cloak around her.
+
+"Come," she said, "I am getting cold and cramped."
+
+He walked by her side to the hotel. At the foot of the steps she left
+him.
+
+"We shall meet again in London," she said, quietly. "Don't be too hard
+upon your old friends when you take your seat. Remember that you were
+once one of us."
+
+She looked round and waved her hand as she disappeared. He caught a
+glimpse of her face as she passed underneath the hanging lamp--the face
+of a tired woman suddenly grown old. With a little groan he made his way
+into the hotel, and slowly ascended the stairs.
+
+Early the next morning Mannering left Bonestre, and in twenty-four hours
+he was back again, summoned by a telegram which had met him in London. It
+seemed to him that everybody at the station and about the hotel regarded
+him with shocked and respectful sympathy. Hester, looking like a ghost,
+took him at once to her room. He was haggard and weary with rapid
+travelling, and he sank into a chair.
+
+"Tell me--the worst!" he said.
+
+"She started with Mr. Englehall about mid-day," Hester said. "They had
+luggage, but I explained that he was going to Paris, she was coming back
+by train. At two o'clock we were rung up on the telephone. Their brake
+had snapped going down the hill by St. Entuiel, and the chauffeur--he is
+mad now--but they think he lost his nerve. They were dashed into a tree,
+and--they were both dead--when they were got out from the wreck."
+
+"God in Heaven!" Mannering murmured, white to the lips.
+
+There was a silence between them. Mannering had covered his head with his
+hands. Hester tried once or twice to speak, but the tears were streaming
+from her eyes. She had the air of having more to say. The white horror of
+tragedy was still in her face.
+
+"There is a letter," she said at last. "She left a letter for you."
+
+Mannering rose slowly to his feet and moved to the lamp. Directly he had
+broken the seal he understood. He read the first line and looked up. His
+eyes met Hester's.
+
+"Who knows--this?" he asked, hoarsely.
+
+"No one! They had not been gone two hours. I explained everything."
+
+Then Mannering read on.
+
+ "My dear Husband:
+
+ "I call you that for the last time, for I am going off with Englehall
+ to Paris. Don't be too shocked, and don't despise me too much. I am
+ just a very ordinary woman, and I'm afraid I've bad blood in my veins.
+ Anyhow, I can't go on living under a glass case any longer. The old
+ life was rotten enough, but this is insupportable. I'm going to have a
+ fling, and after that I don't care what becomes of me.
+
+ "Now, Lawrence, I don't want you to blame yourself. I did think perhaps
+ that when we were married I might have got you to care for me a little,
+ but I suppose that was just my vanity. It wasn't very possible with a
+ woman like--well, never mind who--about. You did your best. You were
+ very nice and very kind to me last night, but it wasn't the real thing,
+ was it? I knew you hated being where you were. I could almost hear your
+ sigh of relief when I let you go. The fact of it is, our marriage was a
+ mistake. I ought to have been satisfied with your name, I suppose, and
+ the position it gave me, but I'm not that sort of woman. I've been in
+ Bohemia too long. I like cheery friends, even if their names are not in
+ Debrett, and I must have some one to care for me, or to pretend to care
+ for me. You know I've cared for you--only you in a certain way--but I'm
+ not heroic enough to be content with a shadowy love. I'm not an
+ idealist. Imagination doesn't content me in the least. I'd rather have
+ an inferior substance than ideal perfection. You see, I'm a very
+ commonplace person at heart, Lawrence--almost vulgar. But these are my
+ last words to you, so I've gone in for plain speaking. Now you're rid
+ of me.
+
+ "That's all! From your point of view I suppose, and your friends, I've
+ gone to the devil. Don't be too sure of it. I'm going to have a good
+ time, and when the end comes I'm willing to pay. If you are idiotic
+ enough to come after me, I shall be angry with you for the first time
+ in my life, and it wouldn't be the least bit of use. Englehall's an old
+ friend of mine, and he's a good sort. He's wanted me to do this often
+ enough for years, but I never felt quite like it. I believe he'd marry
+ me after, but he's got a wife shut up somewhere.
+
+ "I expect you think this a callous sort of letter. Well, I can't help
+ it. If it disgusts you with me, so much the better. I'm sorry for the
+ scandal, but you will get over that. Good-bye, Lawrence. Forgive me all
+ the bother I've been to you.
+
+ "Blanche."
+
+Mannering looked up from the letter, and again his eyes met Hester's. The
+secret was theirs alone. Very carefully he tore the pages into small
+pieces. Then he opened the stove and watched them consumed.
+
+"No one will ever know," Hester said. "She said--when she left--that it
+was a morning's ride--but motors were so uncertain that she took a bag."
+
+Mannering's eyes were filled once more with tears. The intolerable pity
+of the whole thing, its awful suddenness swept every other thought out of
+his mind. He remembered how anxiously she had tried to please him on that
+last night. He loathed himself for the cold brutality of his chilly
+affection. Hester came and knelt by his side, but she said nothing. So
+the hours passed.
+
+
+
+
+BOOK IV
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+THE PERSISTENCY OF BORROWDEAN
+
+
+"And what does Mannering think of it all, I wonder!" Lord Redford
+remarked, lighting a fresh cigarette. "This may be his opportunity, who
+can tell!"
+
+"Will he have the nerve to grasp it?" Borrowdean asked. "Mannering has
+never been proved in a crisis."
+
+"He may have the nerve. I should be more inclined to question the
+desire," Lord Redford said. "For a man in his position he has always
+seemed to me singularly unambitious. I don't think that the prospect of
+being Prime Minister would dazzle him in the least. It is part of the
+genius of the politician too, to know exactly when and how to seize an
+opportunity. I can imagine him watching it come, examining it through his
+eyeglass, and standing on one side with a shrug of the shoulders."
+
+"You do not believe, then," Berenice said, "that he is sufficiently in
+earnest to grasp it?"
+
+"Exactly," Lord Redford said. "I have that feeling about Mannering, I
+must admit, especially during the last two years. He seems to have drawn
+away from all of us, to live altogether too absorbed and self-contained
+a life for a man who has great ambitions to realize, or who is in
+downright earnest about his work."
+
+"What you all forget when you discuss Lawrence Mannering is this,"
+Berenice said. "He holds his position almost as a sacred charge. He is
+absolutely conscientious. He wants certain things for the sake of the
+people, and he will work steadily on until he gets them. I believe it is
+the truth that he has no personal ambition, but if the cause he has at
+heart is to be furthered at all it must be by his taking office.
+Therefore I think that when the time comes he will take it."
+
+"That sounds reasonable enough," Lord Redford admitted. "By the bye, did
+you notice that he is included in the house party at Sandringham again
+this week?"
+
+Anstruther, the youngest Cabinet Minister, and Lord Redford's nephew,
+joined in the conversation.
+
+"I can tell you something for a fact," he said. "My cousin is
+Lady-in-Waiting, and she's been up in town for a few days, and she asked
+me about Mannering. A Certain Personage thinks very highly of him indeed.
+Told some one that Mr. Mannering was the most statesman-like politician
+in the service of his country. I believe he'd sooner see Mannering Prime
+Minister than any one."
+
+"But he has no following," Borrowdean objected.
+
+"I think," Berenice said, slowly, "that he keeps as far aloof as possible
+for one reason, and one reason only. He avoids friendship, but he makes
+no enemies. He cultivates a neutral position whenever he can. What he is
+looking forward to, I am sure, is to found a coalition Government."
+
+"It is very possible," Lord Redford remarked. "I wonder if he will ask me
+to join."
+
+"Always selfish," Berenice laughed. "You men are all alike!"
+
+"On the contrary," Lord Redford answered, "my interest was purely
+patriotic. I cannot imagine the affairs of the country flourishing
+deprived of my valuable services. Let us go and wander through the
+crowd. Members of a Government in extremes like ours ought not to whisper
+together in corners. It gives rise to comment."
+
+Anstruther came hurrying up. He drew Redford on one side.
+
+"Mannering is here," he said, quietly. "Just arrived from Sandringham. He
+is looking for you."
+
+Almost as he spoke Mannering appeared. He did not at first see Berenice,
+and from the corner where she stood she watched him closely.
+
+It was two years since those few weeks at Bonestre, and during all that
+time they had scarcely met. Berenice knew that he had avoided her. For
+twelve months he had declined all social engagements, and since then he
+had pleaded the stress of political affairs as an excuse for leading the
+life almost of a recluse. Unseen herself, she studied him closely. He was
+much thinner, and every trace of his once healthy colouring had
+disappeared. His eyes seemed deeper set. There were streaks of grey in
+his hair. But for all that to her he was unaltered. He was still the one
+man in the world. She saw him shake hands with Lord Redford and draw him
+a little on one side.
+
+"Can you spare me five minutes?" he asked. "I have a matter to discuss
+with you."
+
+"Certainly!" Lord Redford answered. "I am leaving directly, and I might
+drive you home if you liked. We heard that you were at Sandringham."
+
+"I came up this afternoon," Mannering answered. "I heard that you were
+likely to be here, and as Lady Herrington had been kind enough to send me
+a card I came on."
+
+Lord Redford nodded.
+
+"Borrowdean and Anstruther are here too," he remarked. "We all felt in
+need of diversion. As you know very well, we're in a tight corner."
+
+Berenice came out from her place. At the sound of the rustling of her
+skirts both men turned their heads. She wore a gown of black velvet and a
+wonderful rope of pearls hung from her neck. She raised her hand and
+smiled at Mannering.
+
+"I am glad to see you again," she said, softly. "It is quite an age since
+we met, isn't it?"
+
+He held her hand for a moment. The touch of his fingers chilled her. He
+greeted her with quiet courtesy, but there was no answering smile upon
+his lips.
+
+"I have heard often of your movements from Clara," he said. "You have
+been very kind to her."
+
+"It has never occurred to me in that light," she said. "Clara needs a
+chaperon, and I need a companion. We were talking yesterday of going to
+Cairo for the winter. My only fear is that I am robbing you of your
+niece."
+
+"Please do not let that trouble you," he said. "Clara would be a most
+uncomfortable member of my household."
+
+"But are you never at all lonely?" she asked.
+
+"I never have time to think of such a thing," he answered. "Besides, I
+have Hester. She makes a wonderful secretary, and she seems to enjoy the
+work."
+
+"I should like to have a talk with you some time," she said. "Won't you
+come and see me?"
+
+He hesitated.
+
+"It is very kind of you to ask me," he said. "Don't think me churlish,
+but I go nowhere. I am trying to make up, you see, for my years of
+idleness."
+
+She looked at him steadfastly, and her heart sank. The change in
+his outward appearance seemed typical of some deeper and more final
+alteration in his whole nature. She felt herself powerless against the
+absolute impenetrability of his tone and manner. She felt that he had
+fought a battle within himself and conquered; that for some reason or
+other he had decided to walk no longer in the pleasanter paths of life.
+She had come to him unexpectedly, but he had shown no sign of emotion.
+Her influence over him seemed to be wholly a thing of the past. She made
+one more effort.
+
+"I think," she said, "that as one grows older one parts the less readily
+with the few friends who count. I hope that you will change your mind."
+
+He bowed gravely, but he made no answer. Berenice took Borrowdean's
+arm and passed on. There was a little spot of colour in her cheeks.
+Borrowdean felt nerved to his enterprise.
+
+"Let us go somewhere and sit down for a few minutes," he suggested. "The
+rooms are so hot this evening."
+
+She assented without words, and he found a solitary couch in one of the
+further apartments.
+
+"I wonder," he said, after a moment's pause, "whether I might say
+something to you, whether you would listen to me for a few minutes."
+
+Berenice was absorbed in her own thoughts. She allowed him to proceed.
+
+"For a good many years," he said, lowering his voice a little, "I have
+worked hard and done all I could to be successful. I wanted to have some
+sort of a position to offer. I am a Cabinet Minister now, and although I
+don't suppose we can last much longer this time, I shall have a place
+whenever we are in again."
+
+The sense of what he was saying began to dawn upon her. She stopped him
+at once.
+
+"Please do not say any more, Sir Leslie," she begged. "I should have
+given you credit for sufficient perception to have known beforehand the
+absolute impossibility of--of anything of the sort."
+
+"You are still a young woman," he said, quietly. "The world expects you
+to marry again."
+
+"I have no interest in what the world expects of me," she answered, "but
+I may tell you at once that my refusal has nothing whatever to do with
+the question of marriage in the abstract. You are a man of perception,
+Sir Leslie! It will be, I trust, sufficient if I say that I have no
+feelings whatever towards you which would induce me to consider the
+subject even for a moment."
+
+She was unchanged, then! This time he recognized the note of finality
+in her tone. All the time and thought he had given to this matter were
+wasted. He had failed, and he knew why. He seldom permitted himself the
+luxury of anger, but he felt all the poison of bitter hatred stirring
+within him at that moment, and craving for some sort of expression. There
+was nothing he could do, nothing he could say. But if Mannering had been
+within reach then he would have struck him. He rose and walked slowly
+away.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+
+HESTER THINKS IT "A GREAT PITY"
+
+
+"You will understand," Mannering said, as the brougham drove off, "that
+you and I are speaking together merely as friends. I have nothing
+official to say to you. It would be presumption on my part to assume that
+the time is ripe for anything definite while you are still at the head of
+an unbeaten Government. But one learns to read the signs of the times.
+I think that you and I both know that you cannot last the session."
+
+"It is a positive luxury at times," Redford answered, "to be able to
+indulge in absolute candour. We cannot last the session. You pulled us
+through our last tight corner, but we shall part, I suppose, on the New
+Tenement Bill, and then we shall come a cropper."
+
+Mannering nodded.
+
+"The Opposition," he said, "are not strong enough to form a Government
+alone. And I do not think that a one-man Cabinet would be popular. It
+has been suggested to me that at no time in political history have the
+conditions been more favourable for a really strong coalition Government,
+containing men of moderate views on both sides. I am anxious to know
+whether you would be willing to join such a combination."
+
+"Under whom?" Lord Redford asked.
+
+"Under myself," Mannering answered, gravely. "Don't think me
+over-presumptuous. The matter has been very carefully thought out. You
+could not serve under Rushleigh, nor could he serve under you. But you
+could both be invaluable members of a Cabinet of which I was the nominal
+head. I do not wish to entrap you into consent, however, without your
+fully understanding this: a modified, and to a certain extent an
+experimental, scheme of tariff reform would be part of our programme."
+
+"You wish for a reply," Lord Redford said, "only in general terms?"
+
+"Only in general terms, of course," Mannering assented.
+
+"Then you may take it," Lord Redford said, "that I should be proud to
+become a member of such a Government. Anything would be better than a
+fourth-party administration with Imperialism on the brain and rank
+Protection on their programme. They might do mischief which it would take
+centuries to undo."
+
+"We understand one another, Lord Redford," Mannering said, simply. "I am
+very much obliged to you. This is my turning."
+
+Mannering, when he found himself alone in his study, drew a little sigh
+of relief. He flung himself into an easy-chair, and sat with his hands
+pressed against his temples. The events of the day, from the morning at
+Sandringham to his recent conversation with Lord Redford, were certainly
+of sufficiently exciting a nature to provide him with food for thought.
+And yet his mind was full of one thing only, this chance meeting with
+Berenice. It was wonderful to him that she should have changed so little.
+He himself felt that the last two years were equal to a decade, that
+events on the other side of that line with which his life was riven were
+events with which some other person was concerned, certainly not the
+Lawrence Mannering of to-day. And yet he knew now that the battle which
+he had fought was far from a final one. Her power over him was unchanged.
+He was face to face once more with the old problem. His life was sworn to
+the service of the people. He had crowded his days with thoughts and
+deeds and plans for them. Almost every personal luxury and pleasure had
+been abnegated. He had found a sort of fierce delight in the asceticism
+of his daily life, in the unflinching firmness with which he had barred
+the gates which might lead him into smoother and happier ways. To-night
+he was beset with a sudden fear. He rose and looked at himself in the
+glass. He was pale and wan. His face lacked the robust vitality of a few
+years ago. He was ageing fast. He was conscious of certain disquieting
+symptoms in the routine of his daily life. He threw himself back into the
+chair with a little groan. The mockery of his life of ceaseless toil
+seemed suddenly to spread itself out before him, a grim and unlovely
+jest. What if his strength should go? What if all this labour and
+self-denial should be in vain? He found himself growing giddy at the
+thought.
+
+He rang the bell and ordered wine. Then he went to the telephone and rang
+up a doctor who lived near. Very soon, with coat and waistcoat off, he
+was going through a somewhat prolonged examination. Afterwards the doctor
+sat down opposite to him and accepted a cigar.
+
+"What made you send for me this evening?" he asked, curiously.
+
+Mannering hesitated.
+
+"An impulse," he said. "To-morrrow I should have no time to come to
+you. I wasn't feeling quite myself, and it is possible that I may be
+undertaking some very important work before long."
+
+"I shouldn't if I were you," the doctor remarked, quietly.
+
+"The work is of such a nature," Mannering said, "that I could not refuse
+it. It may not come, but if it does I must go through with it."
+
+"I doubt whether you will succeed," the doctor said. "There is nothing
+the matter with you except that you have been drawing on your reserve
+stock of strength to such an extent that you are on the verge of a
+collapse. The longer you stave it off the more complete it will be."
+
+"You are a Job's comforter," Mannering remarked, with a smile. "Send me
+some physic, and I will take things as easy as I can."
+
+"I'll send you some," the doctor answered, "but it won't do you much
+good. What you want is rest and amusement."
+
+Mannering laughed, and showed him out. When he returned to his study
+Hester was there, just returned from a visit to the theatre with some
+friends. She threw off her wrap and looked through the letters which had
+come by the evening's post.
+
+"Did you see this from Richard Fardell?" she asked him. "Parkins is dead
+at last. Fardell says that he has been quite childish for the last
+eighteen months! Are you ill?" she broke off, suddenly.
+
+Mannering, who was lying back in his easy-chair, white almost to the
+lips, roused himself with an effort. He poured out a glass of wine and
+drank it off.
+
+"I'm not ill," he said, with rather a weak smile, "but I'm a little
+tired."
+
+"Who was your visitor?" she asked.
+
+"A doctor. I felt a little run down, so I sent for him. Of course he told
+me the usual story. Rest and a holiday."
+
+She came and sat on the arm of his chair. Every year she grew less and
+less like her mother. Her hair was smoothly brushed back from her
+forehead, and her features were distinctly intellectual. She was by far
+the best secretary Mannering had ever had.
+
+"You need some one to look after you," she said, decisively.
+
+"It seems to me that you do that pretty well," he answered. "I don't want
+any one else."
+
+"You need some one with more authority than I have," she said. "You ought
+to marry."
+
+"Marry!" he gasped.
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Any particular person?"
+
+"Of course! You know whom."
+
+Mannering did not reply at once. He was looking steadfastly into the
+fire, and the gloom in his face was unlightened.
+
+"Hester," he said, at last, in a very low tone, "I will tell you, if you
+like, a short, a very short chapter of my life. It lasted a few hours, a
+day or so, more or less. Yet of course it has made a difference always."
+
+"I should like to hear it," she whispered.
+
+"The two great events of my life," he said, "came together. I was engaged
+to be married to the Duchess of Lenchester at the same time that I found
+myself forced to sever my connexion with the Liberal party. You know, of
+course, that the Duchess has always been a great figure in politics. She
+has ambitions, and her political creed is almost a part of the religion
+of her life. She looked upon my apostasy with horror. It came between us
+at the very moment when I thought that I had found in life the one great
+and beautiful thing."
+
+"If ever she let it come between you," Hester interrupted, softly, "I
+believe that she has repented. We women are quick to find out those
+things, you know," she added, "and I am sure that I am right. She has
+never married any one else. I do not believe that she ever will."
+
+"It is too late," Mannering said. "A union between us now could only lead
+to unhappiness. The disintegration of parties is slowly commencing, and I
+think that the next few years will find me still further apart than I am
+to-day from my old friends. Berenice"--he slipped so easily into calling
+her so--"is heart and soul with them."
+
+"At least," Hester said, "I think that for both your sakes you should
+give her the opportunity of choosing."
+
+"Even that," he said, "would not be wise. We are man and woman still, you
+see, Hester, and there are moments when sentiment is strong enough to
+triumph over principle and sweep our minds bare of all the every-day
+thoughts. But afterwards--there is always the afterwards. The conflict
+must come. Reason stays with us always, and sentiment might weaken with
+the years."
+
+She shook her head.
+
+"The Duchess is a woman," she said, "and the hold of all other things
+grows weak when she loves. Give her the chance."
+
+"Don't!" Mannering exclaimed, almost sharply. "You can't see this matter
+as I do. I have vowed my life now. I have seen my duty, and I have kept
+my face turned steadily towards it. Once I was contented with very
+different things, and I think that I came as near happiness then as a man
+often does. But those days have gone by. They have left a whole world of
+delightful memories, but I have locked the doors of the past behind me."
+
+Hester shook her head.
+
+"You are making a mistake," she said. "Two people who love one another,
+and who are honest in their opinions, find happiness sooner or later if
+they have the courage to seek for it. Don't you know," she continued,
+after a moment's pause, "that--she understood? I always like to think
+what I believe to be the truth. She went away to leave you free."
+
+Mannering rose to his feet and pointed to the clock.
+
+"It is time that you and I were in bed, Hester," he said. "Remember that
+we have a busy morning."
+
+"It seems a pity," she murmured, as she wished him good-night. "A great
+pity!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III
+
+SUMMONED TO WINDSOR
+
+
+Berenice, who had just returned from making a call, was standing in the
+hall, glancing through the cards displayed upon a small round table. The
+major-domo of her household came hurrying out from his office.
+
+"There is a young lady, your Grace," he announced, "who has been waiting
+to see you for half an hour. Her name is Miss Phillimore."
+
+"Where is she?" Berenice asked.
+
+"In the library, your Grace."
+
+"Show her into my own room," Berenice said, "I will see her at once."
+
+Hester was a little nervous, but Berenice set her immediately at her ease
+by the graciousness of her manner. They talked for some time of Bonestre.
+Then there was a moment's pause. Hester summoned up her courage.
+
+"I am afraid," she said, "that you may consider what I am going to say
+rather a liberty. I've thought it all out, and I decided to come to you.
+I couldn't see any other way."
+
+Berenice smiled encouragingly.
+
+"I will promise you," she said, "that I will consider it nothing of the
+sort."
+
+"That is very kind of you," Hester said. "I have come here because Mr.
+Mannering is the greatest friend I have in the world. He stands to me for
+all the relatives most girls have, and I am very fond of him indeed. I
+scarcely remember my father, but Mr. Mannering was always kind to me when
+I was a child. You know, perhaps, that I am living with him now as his
+secretary?"
+
+Berenice nodded pleasantly.
+
+"I see him every day," Hester continued, "and I notice things. He has
+changed a great deal during the last few years. I am getting very anxious
+about him."
+
+"He is not ill, I hope?" Berenice asked. "I too noticed a change. It
+grieved me very much."
+
+"He is simply working himself to death," Hester continued, "without
+relaxation or pleasure of any sort. And all the time he is unhappy. Other
+men, however hard they work, have their hobbies and their occasional
+holidays. He has neither. And I think that I know why. He fights all the
+time to forget."
+
+"To forget what?" Berenice asked, slowly turning her head.
+
+"To forget how near he came once to being very happy," Hester answered,
+boldly. "To forget--you!"
+
+Then her heart sang a little song of triumph, for she saw the instant
+change in the still, cold face turned now a little away from her. She saw
+the proud lips tremble and the unmistakable light leap out from the dark
+eyes. She saw the colour rush into the cheeks, and she had no more fear.
+She rose from her chair and dropped on one knee by Berenice's side.
+
+"Make him happy, please," she begged. "You can do it. You only! He loves
+you!"
+
+Berenice smiled, although her eyes were wet with tears. She laid her
+long, delicate fingers upon the other's hand.
+
+"But, my dear child," she protested, "what can I do? Mr. Mannering won't
+come near me. He won't even write to me. I can't take him by storm, can
+I?"
+
+"He is so foolish," Hester said, also smiling. "He will not understand
+how unimportant all other things are when two people care for one
+another. He talks about the difference in your politics, as though that
+were sufficient to keep you apart!"
+
+Berenice was silent for a moment.
+
+"There was a time," she said, softly, "when I thought so, too."
+
+"Exactly!" Hester declared. "And he doesn't know, of course, that you
+don't think so now."
+
+Berenice smiled slightly.
+
+"You must remember, dear," she said, "that Mr. Mannering and I are in
+rather a peculiar position. My great-grandfather, my father and my uncle
+were all Prime Ministers of England, and they were all staunch Liberals.
+My family has always taken its politics very seriously indeed, and so
+have I. It is not a little thing, this, after all."
+
+"But you will do it!" Hester exclaimed. "I am sure that you will."
+
+Berenice rose to her feet. A sense of excitement was suddenly quivering
+in her veins, her heart was beating fiercely. After all, this child
+was wise. She had been drifting into the dull, passionless life of a
+middle-aged woman. All the joys of youth seemed suddenly to be sweeping
+up from her heart, mocking the serenity of her days, these stagnant days,
+sheltered from the great winds of life, where the waves were ripples and
+the hours changeless. She raised her arms for a moment and dropped them
+to her side.
+
+"Oh, I do not know!" she cried. "It is such an upheaval. If he were
+here--if he asked me himself. But he will never come now."
+
+"I believe that he would come to-morrow," Hester said, "if he were
+sure--"
+
+Berenice laughed softly. There was colour in her cheeks as she turned to
+Hester.
+
+"Tell him to come and have tea with me to-morrow afternoon," she said. "I
+shall be quite alone."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Hester felt all her confidence slipping away from her. The echoes of her
+breathless, passionate words had scarcely died away, and Mannering, to
+all appearance, was unmoved. His still, cold face showed no signs of
+agitation, his dark, beringed eyes were full of nothing but an intense
+weariness.
+
+"Do I understand, Hester," he asked, "that you have been to see the
+Duchess?--that you have spoken of these things to her?"
+
+Her heart sank. His tone was almost censorious. Nevertheless, she stood
+her ground.
+
+"Yes! I have told you the truth. And I am glad that I went. You are very
+clever people, both of you, but you are spoiling your lives for the sake
+of a little common sense. It was necessary for some one to interfere."
+
+Mannering shook his head slowly.
+
+"You meant kindly, Hester," he said, "but it was a mistake. The time when
+that might have been possible has gone by. Neither she nor I can call
+back the hand of time. The last two years have made an old man of me. I
+have no longer my enthusiasm. I am in the whirlpool, and I must fight my
+way through to the end."
+
+She sat at his feet. He was still in the easy-chair into which he had
+sunk on his first coming into the room. He had been speaking in the House
+late, amidst all the excitement of a political crisis.
+
+"Why fight alone," she murmured, "when she is willing to come to you?"
+
+He shook his head.
+
+"There would be conditions," he said, "and she would not understand. I
+may be in office in a month with most of her friends in opposition. The
+situation would be impossible!"
+
+"Rubbish!" Hester declared. "The Duchess is too great a woman to lose so
+utterly her sense of proportion. Don't you understand--that she loves
+you?"
+
+Mannering laughed bitterly.
+
+"She must love a shadow, then!" he said, "for the man she knew does not
+exist any longer. Poor little girl, are you disappointed?" he added, more
+kindly. "I am sorry!"
+
+"I am disappointed to hear you talking like this," she declared. "I will
+not believe that it is more than a mood. You are overtired, perhaps!"
+
+"Ay!" he said. "But I have been overtired for a long time. The strength
+the gods give us lasts a weary while. You must send my excuses to the
+Duchess, Hester. The fates are leading me another way."
+
+"I won't do it," she sobbed. "You shall be reasonable! I will make you
+go!"
+
+He shook his head.
+
+"If you could," he murmured, "you might alter the writing on one little
+page of history. We defeated the Government to-night badly, and I am
+going to Windsor to-morrow afternoon."
+
+Hester rose to her feet and paced the room restlessly. Mannering had
+spoken without exultation. His pallid face seemed to her to have grown
+thin and hard. He saw himself the possible Prime Minister of the morrow
+without the slightest suggestion of any sort of gratified ambition.
+
+"I don't know whether to say that I am glad or not," Hester declared,
+stopping once more by his side. "If you are going to shut yourself off
+from everything else in life which makes for happiness, to forget that
+you are a man, and turn yourself into a law-making machine, well, then,
+I am sorry. I think that your success will be a curse to you. I think
+that you will live to regret it."
+
+Mannering looked at her for a moment with a gleam of his old self shining
+out of his eyes. A sudden pathos, a wave of self-pity had softened his
+face.
+
+"Dear child!" he said, gravely, "I cannot make you understand. I carry
+a burden from which no one can free me. For good or for evil the powers
+that be have set my feet in the path of the climbers, and for the sake of
+those whose sufferings I have seen I must struggle upwards to the end.
+Berenice and the Duchess of Lenchester are two very different persons. I
+cannot take one into my life without the other. It is because I love her,
+Hester, that I let her go. Good-night, child!"
+
+She kissed his hand and went slowly to her room, stumbling upstairs
+through a mist of tears. There was nothing more that she could do.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV
+
+CHECKMATE TO BORROWDEAN
+
+
+Mannering's town house, none too large at any time, was transformed into
+a little hive of industry. Two hurriedly appointed secretaries were at
+work in the dining-room, and Hester was busy typing in her own little
+sanctum.
+
+Mannering sat in his study before a table covered with papers, and for
+the first time during the day was alone for a few moments.
+
+His servant brought in a card. Mannering glanced at it and frowned.
+
+"The gentleman said that he would not keep you for more than a moment,
+sir," the servant announced quietly, mindful of the half-sovereign which
+had been slipped into his hand.
+
+Mannering still looked at the card doubtfully.
+
+"You can show him up," he said at last.
+
+"Very good, sir!"
+
+The man withdrew, and reappeared to usher in Sir Leslie Borrowdean.
+Mannering greeted him without offering his hand.
+
+"You wished to see me, Sir Leslie?" he asked.
+
+Borrowdean came slowly into the room. He closed the door behind him.
+
+"I hope," he said, "that you will not consider my presence an intrusion!"
+
+"You have business with me, I presume," Mannering answered, coldly. "Pray
+sit down."
+
+Borrowdean ignored the chair, towards which Mannering had motioned. He
+came and stood by the side of the table.
+
+"Unless your memory, Mannering," he said, with a hard little laugh, "is
+as short as the proverbial politician's, you can scarcely be surprised at
+my visit."
+
+Mannering raised his eyebrows, and said nothing.
+
+"I must confess," Borrowdean continued, "that I scarcely expected to find
+it necessary for me to come here and remind you that it was I who am
+responsible for your reappearance in politics."
+
+"I am not likely," Mannering said, slowly, "to forget your good offices
+in that respect."
+
+"I felt sure that you would not," Borrowdean answered. "Yet you must not
+altogether blame me for my coming! I understand that the list of your
+proposed Cabinet is to be completed to-morrow afternoon, and as yet I
+have heard nothing from you."
+
+"Your information," Mannering said, "is quite correct. In fact, my list
+is complete already. If your visit here is one of curiosity, I have no
+objection to gratify it. Here is a list of the names I have selected."
+
+He handed a sheet of paper to Borrowdean, who glanced it eagerly down.
+Afterwards he looked up and met Mannering's calm gaze. There was an
+absolute silence for several seconds.
+
+"My name," Borrowdean said, hoarsely, "is not amongst these!"
+
+"It really never occurred to me for a single second to place it there,"
+Mannering answered.
+
+Borrowdean drew a little breath. He was deathly pale.
+
+"You include Redford," he said. "He is a more violent partizan than I
+have ever been. I have heard you say a dozen times that you disapprove of
+turning a man out of office directly he has got into the swing of it. Has
+any one any fault to find with me? I have done my duty, and done it
+thoroughly. I don't know what your programme may be, but if Redford can
+accept it I am sure that I can."
+
+"Possibly," Mannering answered. "I have this peculiarity, though. Call it
+a whim, if you like. I desire to see my Cabinet composed of honourable
+men."
+
+Borrowdean started back as though he had received a blow.
+
+"Am I to accept that as a statement of your opinion of me?" he demanded.
+
+"It seems fairly obvious," Mannering answered, "that such was my
+intention."
+
+"You owe your place in public life to me," Borrowdean exclaimed.
+
+"If I do," Mannering answered, "do you imagine that I consider myself
+your debtor? I tell you that to-day, at this moment, I have no political
+ambitions. Before you appeared at Blakely and commenced your underhand
+scheming, I was a contented, almost a happy man. You imagined that my
+reappearance in political life would be beneficial to you, and with that
+in view, and that only, you set yourself to get me back. You succeeded!
+We won't say how! If you are disappointed with the result what concern
+is that of mine? You have called yourself my friend. I have not for some
+time considered you as such. I owe you nothing. I have no feeling for
+you save one of contempt. To me you figure as the modern political
+adventurer, living on his wits and the credulity of other people. Better
+see how it will pay you in opposition."
+
+Borrowdean, a cold-blooded and calculating man, knew for the first time
+in his life what it was to let his passions govern him. Every word which
+this man had spoken was truth, and therefore all the more bitter to hear.
+He saw himself beaten and humiliated, outwitted by the man whom he had
+sought to make his tool. A slow paroxysm of anger held him rigid. He was
+white to the lips. His nerves and senses were all tingling. There was red
+fire before his eyes.
+
+"If your business with me is ended," Mannering said, waving his hand
+towards the door, "you will forgive me if I remind you that I am much
+occupied."
+
+Borrowdean snatched up the square glass paper cutter from the table, and
+without a second's warning he struck Mannering with it full upon the
+temple.
+
+"Damn you!" he said.
+
+Mannering tried to struggle to his feet, but collapsed, and fell upon the
+floor. Borrowdean kicked his prostrate body.
+
+"Now go and form your Cabinet," he muttered. "May you wake in hell!"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Borrowdean, who left the study a madman, was a sane person the moment
+he began to descend the stairs and found himself face to face with a
+tall, heavily cloaked woman. The flash of familiar jewels in her hair,
+something, perhaps, in the quiet stateliness of her movements, betrayed
+her identity to him. His heart gave a quick jump. A sickening fear stole
+over him. He barred the way.
+
+"Duchess!" he exclaimed.
+
+She waved him aside with an impatient gesture. He could see the frown
+gathering upon her face.
+
+"Sir Leslie!" she replied. "Please let me pass! I want to see Mr.
+Mannering before any one else goes up!"
+
+Sir Leslie drew immediately to one side.
+
+"Pray do not let me detain you," he said, coolly. "Between ourselves, I
+do not think that Mannering is in a fit state to see anybody. I have not
+been able to get a coherent word out of him. He walks all the time
+backwards and forwards like a man demented."
+
+Berenice smiled slightly.
+
+"You are annoyed," she declared, "because you will be in opposition once
+more!"
+
+"If I go into opposition again," Borrowdean answered, "it will be my own
+choice. Mannering has asked me to join his Cabinet."
+
+Berenice raised her eyebrows. Her surprise was genuine.
+
+"You amaze me!" she declared.
+
+"I was amazed myself," he answered.
+
+She passed on her way, and Borrowdean descending, took a cab quietly
+home. Berenice, with her hand upon the door, hesitated. Hester had
+purposely sent her up alone. They had waited until they had heard
+Borrowdean leave the room. And now at the last moment she hesitated. She
+was a proud woman. She was departing now, for his sake, from the
+conventions of a lifetime. He had declined to come to her; no matter, she
+had come to him instead. Suppose--he should not be glad? Suppose she
+should fail to see in his face her justification? It was very quiet in
+the room. She could not even hear the scratching of his pen. Twice her
+fingers closed upon the knob of the door, and twice she hesitated. If it
+had not been for facing Hester below she would probably have gone
+silently away.
+
+And then--she heard a sound. It was not at all the sort of sound for
+which she had been listening, but it brought her hesitation to a sudden
+end. She threw open the door, and a little cry of amazement broke from
+her trembling lips. It was indeed a groan which she had heard. Mannering
+was stretched upon the floor, his eyes half closed, his face ghastly
+white. For a moment she stood motionless, a whole torrent of arrested
+speech upon her quivering lips. Then she dropped on her knees by his side
+and lifted his cold hand.
+
+"Oh, my love!" she murmured. "My love!"
+
+But he made no sign. Then she stood up, and her cry of horror rang
+through the house.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V
+
+A BRAZEN PROCEEDING
+
+
+Mannering opened his eyes lazily. His companion had stopped suddenly in
+his reading. He appeared to be examining a certain paragraph in the paper
+with much interest. Mannering stretched out his hand for a match, and
+relit his cigarette.
+
+"Read it out, Richard," he said. "Don't mind me."
+
+The young man started slightly.
+
+"I am very sorry, sir," he said. "I thought that you were asleep!"
+
+Mannering smiled.
+
+"What about the paragraph?" he asked.
+
+"It is just this," Richard answered, reading. "'The Duchess of Lenchester
+and Miss Clara Mannering have arrived at Claridge's from the South of
+Italy.'"
+
+Mannering looked at him keenly.
+
+"I am curious to know which part of that announcement you find so
+interesting," he said.
+
+"Certainly not the latter part, sir," the young man answered. "I thought
+perhaps you would have noticed--I meant to speak to you as soon as you
+were a little stronger--I have asked Hester to be my wife!"
+
+"Then all I can say," Mannering declared, gravely, "is, that you are a
+remarkably sensible young man. I am quite strong enough to bear a shock
+of that sort."
+
+"I'm very glad to hear you say so, sir," Richard said. "Of course I
+shouldn't think of taking her away until you were quite yourself again."
+
+"The cheek of the young man!" Mannering murmured. "She wouldn't go!"
+
+"I don't believe she would," Richard laughed. "Of course we consider that
+you are very nearly well now."
+
+"You can consider what you like," Mannering answered, "but I shall remain
+an invalid as long as it pleases me."
+
+Hester appeared on the upper lawn, and Richard rose up at once.
+
+"If you don't mind, sir," he said, "I think that I should like to go and
+tell Hester that I have spoken to you."
+
+Mannering nodded. He watched the two young people stroll off together
+towards the rose-garden, talking earnestly. He heard the little iron gate
+open and close. He watched them disappear behind the hedge of laurels. A
+puff of breeze brought the faint odour of roses to him, and with it a
+sudden host of memories. His eyes grew wistful. He felt something tugging
+at his heartstrings. Only a few years ago life here had seemed so
+wonderful a thing--only a few years, but with all the passions and
+struggles of a lifetime crowded into them. The maelstrom was there still,
+but he himself had crept out of it. What was there left? Peace, haunted
+with memories, rest, troubled by desire. He heard the sound of their
+voices in the rose-garden, and he turned away with a pain in his heart of
+which he was ashamed. These things were for the young! If youth had
+passed him by, still there were compensations!
+
+Compensations, aye--but he wanted none of them! He picked up the
+newspaper, and with a little difficulty, for his sight was not yet good,
+found a certain paragraph. Then the paper slipped again from his fingers,
+and he heard the sweeping of a woman's dress across the smooth-shaven
+lawn. He gripped the sides of his chair and set his teeth hard. He
+struggled to rise, but she moved swiftly up to him with a gesture of
+remonstrance.
+
+"Please don't move," she exclaimed, as though her coming were the most
+natural thing in the world. "I am going to sit down with you, if I may!"
+
+He murmured an expression of conventional delight. She wore a dress of
+some soft white material, and her figure was as wonderful as ever. He
+recovered himself almost at once and studied her admiringly.
+
+"Paris?" he murmured.
+
+"Paquin!" she answered. "I remembered that you liked me in white."
+
+"But where on earth have you come from?" he asked.
+
+"The Farm," she answered. "I'm going to take it for three months--if
+you're decent to me!"
+
+"That rascal Richard!" he muttered. "Never told me a word! Pretended to
+be surprised when he heard you and Clara were back."
+
+She nodded.
+
+"Clara is going to marry that Frenchman next month," she said, "and I
+shall be looking for another companion. Do you know of one?"
+
+"I haven't another niece," he answered.
+
+"Even if you had," she said, "I have come to the conclusion that I want
+something different. Will you listen to me patiently for a moment?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Will you marry me, please?" she said. "No, don't interrupt. I want there
+to be no misunderstandings this time. I don't care whether you are an
+invalid or not. I don't care whether you are going back into politics or
+not. I don't care whether we live here or in any other corner of the
+world. You can call yourself anything, from an anarchist to a Tory--or be
+anything. You can have all your workingmen here to dinner in flannel
+shirts, if you like, and I'll play bowls with their wives on the lawn.
+Nothing matters but this one thing, Lawrence. Will you marry me--and try
+to care a little?"
+
+"This is absolutely," Mannering declared, taking her into his arms, "the
+most brazen proceeding!"
+
+"It's a good deal better than the bungle we made of it before," she
+murmured.
+
+
+THE END
+
+
+
+
+ * * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+E. Phillips Oppenheim's Novels
+
+
+A PRINCE OF SINNERS
+
+Thoroughly matured, brilliantly constructed, and convincingly
+told.--_London Times_.
+
+It is rare that so much knowledge of the world, taken as a whole, is
+set between two covers of a novel.--_Chicago Daily News_.
+
+
+ANNA THE ADVENTURESS
+
+A story of London life that is at once unusual, original, consistent,
+and delightful.--_Buffalo Express_.
+
+An entrancing story which has seldom been surpassed as a study of
+feminine character and sentiment.--_Outlook_, London.
+
+
+ENOCH STRONE
+
+In no other novel has Mr. Oppenheim created such life-like characters
+or handled his plot with such admirable force and restraint as in this
+capital story of the career of masterful Enoch Strone.
+
+
+A SLEEPING MEMORY
+
+A story in occultism, but with all its mysticism and its dealings with
+the unknowable the book is never dull, the thread of the human story
+in it is never lost sight of for a moment.--_Boston Transcript_.
+
+
+MYSTERIOUS MR. SABIN
+
+Emphatically a good story--strong, bold, original, and admirably
+told.--_Literature_, London.
+
+Intensely readable for the dramatic force with which the story is
+told, the absolute originality of the underlying creative thought, and
+the strength of all the men and women who fill the pages.--_Pittsburgh
+Times_.
+
+
+THE YELLOW CRAYON
+
+_Containing the Further Adventures of "Mysterious
+Mr. Sabin"_
+
+The efforts of Mr. Sabin, one of Mr. Oppenheim's most fascinating
+characters, to free his wife from an entanglement with the Order of
+the Yellow Crayon, give the author one of his most complicated and
+absorbing plots. A number of the characters of "Mysterious Mr.
+Sabin" figure in this delightful work.
+
+
+THE TRAITORS
+
+A brilliant and engrossing story of love and adventure and Russian
+political intrigue. A revolution, the recall of an exiled king, the
+defence of his dominion against Turkish aggression, furnish a series
+of exciting pictures and dramatic situations.
+
+
+THE BETRAYAL
+
+In none of Mr. Oppenheim's fascinating and absorbing books has
+he better illustrated his remarkable faculty for holding the reader's
+interest to the end than in "The Betrayal." The efforts of the
+French Secret Service to obtain important papers relating to the
+Coast Defence of England are the _motif_ of its remarkable plot.
+
+
+A MILLIONAIRE OF YESTERDAY
+
+Mr. Oppenheim has never written a better story than "A Millionaire
+of Yesterday." He grips the reader's attention at the start by
+his vivid picture of the two men in the West African bush making a
+grim fight for life and fortune, and he holds it to the finish. The
+volume is thrilling throughout, while the style is excellent.
+
+
+THE MAN AND HIS KINGDOM
+
+This brilliant, nervous, and intensely dramatic tale of love, intrigue,
+and revolution in a South American State is so human and life-like
+that the reader is bewildered by the writer's evident daring, and his
+equal fidelity to things as they are.
+
+
+THE LOST LEADER
+
+As fascinating a story of modern life as a novelist has yet conceived
+and one that arrests the mind by its fine strenuousness of purpose.
+
+
+THE MALEFACTOR
+
+This amazing story of the strange revenge of Sir Wingrave Seton,
+who suffered imprisonment for a crime he did not commit rather than
+defend himself at a woman's expense, "will make the most languid
+alive with expectant interest," says the _Chicago Record-Herald_.
+
+
+A MAKER OF HISTORY
+
+A story of absorbing interest turning on a complicated plot worked
+out with dexterous craftsmanship. A capital yarn of European secret
+service.--_Literary Digest_.
+
+
+THE MASTER MUMMER
+
+Will be found of absorbing interest to those who love a story of
+action and romance.--_Academy_, London.
+
+
+
+***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK A LOST LEADER***
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+<meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=ISO-8859-1" />
+<title>The Project Gutenberg eBook of A Lost Leader, by E. Phillips Oppenheim</title>
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+<h1>The Project Gutenberg eBook, A Lost Leader, by E. Phillips Oppenheim,
+Illustrated by Fred Pegram</h1>
+<pre>
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at <a href = "https://www.gutenberg.org">www.gutenberg.org</a></pre>
+<p>Title: A Lost Leader</p>
+<p>Author: E. Phillips Oppenheim</p>
+<p>Release Date: November 14, 2005 [eBook #17063]</p>
+<p>Language: English</p>
+<p>Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1</p>
+<p>***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK A LOST LEADER***</p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<h3>E-text prepared by Suzanne Shell, Mary Meehan,<br />
+ and the Project Gutenberg Online Distributed Proofreading Team<br />
+ (https://www.pgdp.net/)</h3>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<hr class="full" />
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<a href="images/ill_cover.jpg"><img src="images/ill_cover.jpg" alt=""/></a>
+</div>
+
+
+
+<h1>A Lost Leader</h1>
+
+<h2>By E. Phillips Oppenheim</h2>
+
+<h4>Author of "A Maker of History," "Mysterious Mr. Sabin," "The Master
+Mummer," "Anna the Adventuress," Etc.</h4>
+
+<h4>Illustrated by Fred Pegram</h4>
+
+<h5>Boston<br />
+Little, Brown &amp; Company<br />
+1907</h5>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2>CONTENTS</h2>
+
+<!-- Autogenerated TOC. Modify or delete as required. -->
+
+<h3>BOOK I</h3>
+<p>
+<a href="#CHAPTER_I">CHAPTER I--<span class="smcap">Reconstruction</span></a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_II">CHAPTER II--<span class="smcap">The Woman with an Alias</span></a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_III">CHAPTER III--<span class="smcap">Wanted&mdash;A Politician</span></a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_IV">CHAPTER IV--<span class="smcap">The Duchess Asks a Question</span></a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_V">CHAPTER V--<span class="smcap">The Hesitation of Mr. Mannering</span></a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_VI">CHAPTER VI--<span class="smcap">Sacrifice</span></a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_VII">CHAPTER VII--<span class="smcap">The Duchess's "At Home"</span></a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_VIII">CHAPTER VIII--<span class="smcap">The Mannering Mystery</span></a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_IX">CHAPTER IX--<span class="smcap">The Pumping of Mrs. Phillimore</span></a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_X">CHAPTER X--<span class="smcap">The Man with a Motive</span></a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XI">CHAPTER XI--<span class="smcap">Mannering's Alternative</span></a><br />
+</p>
+<h3>BOOK II</h3>
+<p>
+<a href="#CHAPTER_Ia">CHAPTER I--<span class="smcap">Borrowdean makes a Bargain</span></a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_IIa">CHAPTER II--<span class="smcap">"Cherchez la Femme"</span></a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_IIIa">CHAPTER III--<span class="smcap">One of the "Sufferers"</span></a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_IVa">CHAPTER IV--<span class="smcap">Debts of Honour</span></a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_Va">CHAPTER V--<span class="smcap">Love <i>versus</i> Politics</span></a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_VIa">CHAPTER VI--<span class="smcap">The Conscience of a Statesman</span></a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_VIIa">CHAPTER VII--<span class="smcap">A Blow for Borrowdean</span></a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_VIIIa">CHAPTER VIII--<span class="smcap">A Page from the Past</span></a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_IXa">CHAPTER IX--<span class="smcap">The Faltering of Mannering</span></a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_Xa">CHAPTER X--<span class="smcap">The End of a Dream</span></a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XIa">CHAPTER XI--<span class="smcap">Borrowdean shows his "Hand"</span></a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XIIa">CHAPTER XII--<span class="smcap">Sir Leslie Borrowdean incurs a Heavy Debt</span></a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XIIIa">CHAPTER XIII--<span class="smcap">The Woman and&mdash;the Other Woman</span></a><br />
+</p>
+<h3>BOOK III</h3>
+<p>
+<a href="#CHAPTER_Ib">CHAPTER I--<span class="smcap">Matrimony and an Awkward Meeting</span></a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_IIb">CHAPTER II--<span class="smcap">The Snub for Borrowdean</span></a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_IIIb">CHAPTER III--<span class="smcap">Clouds&mdash;and a Call to Arms</span></a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_IVb">CHAPTER IV--<span class="smcap">Disaster</span></a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_Vb">CHAPTER V--<span class="smcap">The Journalist Intervenes</span></a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_VIb">CHAPTER VI--<span class="smcap">Treachery and a Telegram</span></a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_VIIb">CHAPTER VII--<span class="smcap">Mr. Mannering, M.P.</span></a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_VIIIb">CHAPTER VIII--<span class="smcap">Playing the Game</span></a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_IXb">CHAPTER IX--<span class="smcap">The Tragedy of a Key</span></a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_Xb">CHAPTER X--<span class="smcap">Blanche finds a Way Out</span></a><br />
+</p>
+<h3>BOOK IV</h3>
+<p>
+<a href="#CHAPTER_Ic">CHAPTER I--<span class="smcap">The Persistency of Borrowdean</span></a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_IIc">CHAPTER II--<span class="smcap">Hester Thinks it "A Great Pity"</span></a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_IIIc">CHAPTER III--<span class="smcap">Summoned to Windsor</span></a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_IVc">CHAPTER IV--<span class="smcap">Checkmate to Borrowdean</span></a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_Vc">CHAPTER V--<span class="smcap">A Brazen Proceeding</span></a><br />
+<br />
+<a href="#E_Phillips_Oppenheims_Novels">E. Phillips Oppenheim's Novels</a><br />
+</p>
+<!-- End Autogenerated TOC. -->
+
+
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2>ILLUSTRATIONS</h2>
+
+<p>
+<a href="images/ill1_th.jpg">'I am very glad to know you, Mrs. Mannering.'</a><br />
+
+<a href="images/ill2_th.jpg">'I must have a few words with you before I go back,' he said, nonchalantly.</a><br />
+
+<a href="images/ill3_th.jpg">She leaned over him, one hand on the back of his chair.</a><br />
+
+<a href="images/ill4_th.jpg">Sir Leslie never quite forgot her gesture as she motioned him towards the door.</a><br />
+
+<a href="images/ill5_th.jpg">She was the only beautiful woman who sat alone and companionless.</a><br />
+
+<a href="images/ill6_th.jpg">'You will find yourself repaid for this, Sir Leslie,' she murmured.</a><br />
+
+<a href="images/ill7_th.jpg">Mannering rose to play his shot.</a><br />
+
+<a href="images/ill8_th.jpg">She was already on her way up the grey stone steps.</a>
+</p>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h1>A LOST LEADER</h1>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2>BOOK I</h2>
+
+
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_I" id="CHAPTER_I"></a>CHAPTER I</h2>
+
+<h3>RECONSTRUCTION</h3>
+
+
+<p>The two men stood upon the top of a bank bordering the rough road which
+led to the sea. They were listening to the lark, which had risen
+fluttering from their feet a moment or so ago, and was circling now above
+their heads. Mannering, with a quiet smile, pointed upwards.</p>
+
+<p>"There, my friend!" he exclaimed. "You can listen now to arguments more
+eloquent than any which I could ever frame. That little creature is
+singing the true, uncorrupted song of life. He sings of the sunshine, the
+buoyant air; the pure and simple joy of existence is beating in his
+little heart. The things which lie behind the hills will never sadden
+him. His kingdom is here, and he is content."</p>
+
+<p>Borrowdean's smile was a little cynical. He was essentially of that order
+of men who are dwellers in cities, and even the sting of the salt breeze
+blowing across the marshes&mdash;marshes riven everywhere with long arms of
+the sea&mdash;could bring no colour to his pale cheeks.</p>
+
+<p>"Your little bird&mdash;a lark, I think you called it," he remarked, "may be a
+very eloquent prophet for the whole kingdom of his species, but the song
+of life for a bird and that for a man are surely different things!"</p>
+
+<p>"Not so very different after all," Mannering answered, still watching the
+bird. "The longer one lives, the more clearly one recognizes the absolute
+universality of life."</p>
+
+<p>Borrowdean shrugged his shoulders, with a little gesture of impatience.
+He had left London at a moment when he could ill be spared, and had not
+travelled to this out-of-the-way corner of the kingdom to exchange
+purposeless platitudes with a man whose present attitude towards life at
+any rate he heartily despised. He seated himself upon a half-broken rail,
+and lit a cigarette.</p>
+
+<p>"Mannering," he said, "I did not come here to simper cheap philosophies
+with you like a couple of schoolgirls. I have a real live errand. I want
+to speak to you of great things."</p>
+
+<p>Mannering moved a little uneasily. He had a very shrewd idea as to the
+nature of that errand.</p>
+
+<p>"Of great things," he repeated slowly. "Are you in earnest, Borrowdean?"</p>
+
+<p>"Why not?"</p>
+
+<p>"Because," Mannering continued, "I have left the world of great things,
+as you and I used to regard them, very far behind. I am glad to see you
+here, of course, but I cannot think of any serious subject which it would
+be useful or profitable for us to discuss. You understand me, Borrowdean,
+I am sure!"</p>
+
+<p>Borrowdean closely eyed this man who once had been his friend.</p>
+
+<p>"The old sore still rankles, then, Mannering," he said. "Has time done
+nothing to heal it?"</p>
+
+<p>Mannering laughed easily.</p>
+
+<p>"How can you think me such a child?" he exclaimed. "If Rochester himself
+were to come to see me he would be as welcome as you are. In fact," he
+continued, more seriously, "if you could only realize, my friend, how
+peaceful and happy life here may be, amongst the quiet places, you would
+believe me at once when I assure you that I can feel nothing but
+gratitude towards those people and those circumstances which impelled me
+to seek it."</p>
+
+<p>"What should you think, then," Borrowdean asked, watching his friend
+through half-closed eyes, "of those who sought to drag you from it?"</p>
+
+<p>Mannering's laugh was as free and natural as the wind itself. He had
+bared his head, and had turned directly seawards.</p>
+
+<p>"Hatred, my dear Borrowdean," he declared, "if I thought that they had a
+single chance of success. As it is&mdash;indifference."</p>
+
+<p>Borrowdean's eyebrows were raised. He held his cigarette between his
+fingers, and looked at it for several moments.</p>
+
+<p>"Yet I am here," he said slowly, "for no other purpose."</p>
+
+<p>Mannering turned and faced his friend.</p>
+
+<p>"All I can say is that I am sorry to hear it," he declared. "I know the
+sort of man you are, Borrowdean, and I know very well that if you have
+come down here with something to say to me you will say it. Therefore go
+on. Let us have it over."</p>
+
+<p>Borrowdean stood up. His tone acquired a new earnestness. He became at
+once more of a man. The cynical curve of his lips had vanished.</p>
+
+<p>"We are on the eve of great opportunities, Mannering," he said. "Six
+months ago the result of the next General Election seemed assured. We
+appeared to be as far off any chance of office as a political party could
+be. To-day the whole thing is changed. We are on the eve of a general
+reconstruction. It is our one great chance of this generation. I come to
+you as a patriot. Rochester asks you to forget."</p>
+
+<p>Mannering held up his hand.</p>
+
+<p>"Stop one moment, Borrowdean," he said. "I want you to understand this
+once and for all. I have no grievance against Rochester. The old wound,
+if it ever amounted to that, is healed. If Rochester were here at this
+moment I would take his hand cheerfully. But&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Ah! There is a but, then," Borrowdean interrupted.</p>
+
+<p>"There is a but," Mannering assented. "You may find it hard to
+understand, but here is the truth. I have lost all taste for public life.
+The whole thing is rotten, Borrowdean, rotten from beginning to end. I
+have had enough of it to last me all my days. Party policy must come
+before principle. A man's individuality, his whole character, is assailed
+and suborned on every side. There is but one life, one measure of days,
+that you or I know anything of. It doesn't last very long. The months and
+years have a knack of slipping away emptily enough unless we are always
+standing to attention. Therefore I think that it becomes our duty to
+consider very carefully, almost religiously, how best to use them. Come
+here for a moment, Borrowdean. I want to show you something."</p>
+
+<p>The two men stood side by side upon the grassy bank, Mannering
+broad-shouldered and vigorous, his clean, hard-cut features tanned with
+wind and sun, his eyes bright and vigorous with health; Leslie
+Borrowdean, once his greatest friend, a man of almost similar physique,
+but with the bent frame and listless pallor of a dweller in the crowded
+places of life. Without enthusiasm his tired eyes followed the sweep of
+Mannering's arm.</p>
+
+<p>"You see those yellow sandhills beyond the marshes there? Behind them is
+the sea. Do you catch that breath of wind? Take off your hat, man, and
+get it into your lungs. It comes from the North Sea, salt and fresh and
+sweet. I think that it is the purest thing on earth. You can walk here
+for miles and miles in the open, and the wind is like God's own music.
+Borrowdean, I am going to say things to you which one says but once or
+twice in his life. I came to this country a soured man, cynical, a
+pessimist, a materialist by training and environment. To-day I speak of a
+God with bowed head, for I believe that somewhere behind all these
+beautiful things their prototype must exist. Don't think I've turned
+ranter. I've never spoken like this to any one else before, and I don't
+suppose I ever shall again. Here is Nature, man, the greatest force on
+earth, the mother, the mistress, beneficent, wonderful! You are a
+creature of cities. Stay with me here for a day or two, and the joy of
+all these things will steal into your blood. You, too, will know what
+peace is."</p>
+
+<p>Borrowdean, as though unconsciously, straightened himself. If no colour
+came to his cheeks, the light of battle was at least in his eyes. This
+man was speaking heresies. The words sprang to his lips.</p>
+
+<p>"Peace!" he exclaimed, scornfully. "Peace is for the dead. The last
+reward perhaps of a breaking heart. The life effective, militant, is
+the only possible existence for men. Pull yourself together, Mannering,
+for Heaven's sake. Yours is the <i>faineant</i> spirit of the decadent,
+masquerading in the garb of a sham primitivism. Were you born into the
+world, do you think, to loiter through life an idle worshipper at the
+altar of beauty? Who are you to dare to skulk in the quiet places, whilst
+the battle of life is fought by others?"</p>
+
+<p>Another lark had risen almost from their feet, and, circling its way
+upwards, was breaking into song. And below, the full spring tide was
+filling the pools and creeks with the softly flowing, glimmering
+sea-water. The fishing boats, high and dry an hour ago, were passing now
+seaward along the silvery way. All these things Mannering was watching
+with rapt eyes, even whilst he listened to his companion.</p>
+
+<p>"Dear friend," he said, "the world can get on very well without me, and
+I have no need of the world. The battle that you speak of&mdash;well, I have
+been in the fray, as you know. The memory of it is still a nightmare to
+me."</p>
+
+<p>Borrowdean had the appearance of a man who sought to put a restraint upon
+his words. He was silent for a moment, and then he spoke very
+deliberately.</p>
+
+<p>"Mannering," he said, "do not think me wholly unsympathetic. There is a
+side of me which sympathises deeply with every word which you have said.
+And there is another which forces me to remind you again, and again, that
+we men were never born to linger in the lotos lands of the world. You do
+not stand for yourself alone. You exist as a unit of humanity. Think of
+your responsibilities. You have found for yourself a beautiful corner of
+the world. That is all very well for you, but how about the rest? How
+about the millions who are chained to the cities that they may earn their
+living pittance, whose wives and children fill the churchyards, the
+echoes of whose weary, never-ceasing cry must reach you even here? They
+are the people, the sufferers, fellow-links with you in the chain of
+humanity. You may stand aloof as you will, but you can never cut yourself
+wholly away from the great family of your fellows. You may hide from your
+responsibilities, but the burden of them will lie heavy upon your
+conscience, the poison will penetrate sometimes into your most jealously
+guarded paradise. We are of the people's party, you and I, Mannering, and
+I tell you that the tocsin has sounded. We need you!"</p>
+
+<p>A shadow had fallen upon Mannering's face. Borrowdean was in earnest, and
+his appeal was scarcely one to be treated lightly. Nevertheless,
+Mannering showed no sign of faltering, though his tone was certainly
+graver.</p>
+
+<p>"Leslie," he said, "you speak like a prophet, but believe me, my mind is
+made up. I have taken root here. Such work as I can do from my study is,
+as it always has been, at your service. But I myself have finished with
+actual political life. Don't press me too hard. I must seem churlish and
+ungrateful, but if I listened to you for hours the result would be the
+same. I have finished with actual political life."</p>
+
+<p>Borrowdean shrugged his shoulders despairingly. Such a man was hard to
+deal with.</p>
+
+<p>"Mannering," he protested, "you must not, you really must not, send me
+away like this. You speak of your written work. Don't think that I
+underestimate it because I have not alluded to it before. I myself
+honestly believe that it was those wonderful articles of yours in the
+<i>Nineteenth Century</i> which brought back to a reasonable frame of mind
+thousands who were half led away by the glamour of this new campaign. You
+kindled the torch, my friend, and you must bear it to victory. You bring
+me to my last resource. If you will not serve under Rochester, come
+back&mdash;and Rochester will serve under you when the time comes."</p>
+
+<p>Mannering shook his head slowly.</p>
+
+<p>"I wish I could convince you," he said, "once and for all, that my
+refusal springs from no such reasons as you seem to imagine. I would
+sooner sit here, with a volume of Pater or Meredith, and this west wind
+blowing in my face, than I would hear myself acclaimed Prime Minister of
+England. Let us abandon this discussion once and for all, Borrowdean. We
+have arrived at a cul-de-sac, and I have spoken my last word."</p>
+
+<p>Borrowdean threw his half-finished cigarette into the ever-widening creek
+below. It was characteristic of the man that his face showed no sign of
+disappointment. Only for several moments he kept silence.</p>
+
+<p>"Come," Mannering said at last. "Let us make our way back to the house.
+If you are resolved to get back to town to-night, we ought to be thinking
+about luncheon."</p>
+
+<p>"Thank you," Borrowdean said. "I must return."</p>
+
+<p>They started to walk inland, but they had taken only a few steps when
+they both, as though by a common impulse, stopped. An unfamiliar sound
+had broken in upon the deep silence of this quiet land. Borrowdean, who
+was a few paces ahead, pointed to the bend in the road below, and turned
+towards his companion with a little gesture of cynical amusement.</p>
+
+<p>"Behold," he exclaimed, "the invasion of modernity. Even your
+time-forgotten paradise, Mannering, has its civilizations, then. What an
+anachronism!"</p>
+
+<p>With a cloud of dust behind, and with the sun flashing upon its polished
+metal parts, a motor car swung into sight, and came rushing towards them.
+Borrowdean, always a keen observer of trifles, noticed the change in
+Mannering's face.</p>
+
+<p>"It is a neighbour of mine," he remarked. "She is on her way to the golf
+links."</p>
+
+<p>"Golf links!" Borrowdean exclaimed.</p>
+
+<p>Mannering nodded.</p>
+
+<p>"Behind the sandhills there," he remarked.</p>
+
+<p>There was a grinding of brakes. The car came to a standstill below. A
+woman, who sat alone in the back seat, raised her veil and looked
+upwards.</p>
+
+<p>"Am I late?" she asked. "Clara has gone on&mdash;they told me!"</p>
+
+<p>She had addressed Mannering, but her eyes seemed suddenly drawn to
+Borrowdean. As though dazzled by the sun, she dropped her veil.
+Borrowdean was standing as though turned to stone, perfectly rigid and
+motionless. His face was like a still, white mask.</p>
+
+<p>"I am so sorry," Mannering said, "but I have had a most unexpected visit
+from an old friend. May I introduce Sir Leslie Borrowdean&mdash;Mrs.
+Handsell!"</p>
+
+<p>The lady in the car bent her head, and Borrowdean performed an automatic
+salute. Mannering continued:</p>
+
+<p>"I am afraid that I must throw myself upon your mercy! Sir Leslie insists
+upon returning this afternoon, and I am taking him back for an early
+luncheon. You will find Clara and Lindsay at the golf club. May we have
+our foursome to-morrow?"</p>
+
+<p>"Certainly! I will not keep you for a moment. I must hurry now, or the
+tide will be over the road."</p>
+
+<p>She motioned the driver to proceed, but Borrowdean interposed.</p>
+
+<p>"Mannering," he said, "I am afraid that the poison of your lotos land is
+beginning to work already. May I stay until to-morrow and walk round with
+you whilst you play your foursome? I should enjoy it immensely."</p>
+
+<p>Mannering looked at his friend for a moment in amazement. Then he laughed
+heartily.</p>
+
+<p>"By all means!" he answered. "Our foursome stands, then, Mrs. Handsell.
+This way, Borrowdean!"</p>
+
+<p>The two men turned once more seaward, walking in single file along the
+top of the grassy bank. The woman in the car inclined her head, and
+motioned the driver to proceed.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_II" id="CHAPTER_II"></a>CHAPTER II</h2>
+
+<h3>THE WOMAN WITH AN ALIAS</h3>
+
+
+<p>Borrowdean seemed after all to take but little interest in the game. He
+walked generally, some distance away from the players, on the top of the
+low bank of sandhills which fringed the sea. He was one of those men whom
+solitude never wearies, a weaver of carefully thought-out schemes, no
+single detail of which was ever left to chance or impulse. Such moments
+as these were valuable to him. He bared his head to the breeze, stopped
+to listen to the larks, watched the sea-gulls float low over the lapping
+waters, without paying the slightest attention to any one of them. The
+instinctive cunning which never deserted him led him without any
+conscious effort to assume a pleasure in these things which, as a matter
+of fact, he found entirely meaningless. It led him, too, to choose a
+retired spot for those periods of intensely close observation to which he
+every now and then subjected his host and the woman who was now his
+partner in the game. What he saw entirely satisfied him. Yet the way was
+scarcely clear.</p>
+
+<p>They caught him up near one of the greens, and he stood with his hands
+behind him, and his eyeglass securely fixed, gravely watching them
+approach and put for the hole. To him the whole performance seemed
+absolutely idiotic, but he showed no sign of anything save a mild and
+genial interest. Clara, Mannering's niece, who was immensely impressed
+with him, lingered behind.</p>
+
+<p>"Don't you really care for any games at all, Sir Leslie?" she asked.</p>
+
+<p>He shook his head.</p>
+
+<p>"I know that you think me a barbarian," he remarked, smiling.</p>
+
+<p>"On the contrary," she declared, "that is probably what you think us. I
+suppose they are really a waste of time when one has other things to do!
+Only down here, you see, there is nothing else to do."</p>
+
+<p>He looked at her thoughtfully. He had never yet in his life spoken half a
+dozen words with man, woman or child without wondering whether they might
+not somehow or other contribute towards his scheme of life. Clara
+Mannering was pretty, and no doubt foolish. She lived alone with her
+uncle, and possibly had some influence over him. It was certainly worth
+while.</p>
+
+<p>"I do not know you nearly well enough, Miss Mannering," he said, smiling,
+"to tell you what I really think. But I can assure you that you don't
+seem a barbarian to me at all."</p>
+
+<p>She was suddenly grave. It was her turn to play a stroke. She examined
+the ball, carefully selected a club from her bag, and with a long, easy
+swing sent it flying towards the hole.</p>
+
+<p>"Wonderful!" he murmured.</p>
+
+<p>She looked up at him and laughed.</p>
+
+<p>"Tell me what you are thinking," she insisted.</p>
+
+<p>"That if I played golf," he answered, "I should like to be able to play
+like that."</p>
+
+<p>"But you must have played games sometimes," she insisted.</p>
+
+<p>"When I was at Eton&mdash;" he murmured.</p>
+
+<p>Mannering looked back, smiling.</p>
+
+<p>"He was in the Eton Eleven, Clara, and stroked his boat at college. Don't
+you believe all he tells you."</p>
+
+<p>"I shall not believe another word," she declared.</p>
+
+<p>"I hope you don't mean it," he protested, "or I must remain dumb."</p>
+
+<p>"You want to go off and tramp along the ridges by yourself," she
+declared. "Confess!"</p>
+
+<p>"On the contrary," he answered, "I should like to carry that bag for you
+and hand out the&mdash;er&mdash;implements."</p>
+
+<p>She unslung it at once from her shoulder.</p>
+
+<p>"You have rushed upon your fate," she said. "Now let me fasten it for
+you."</p>
+
+<p>"Is there any remuneration?" he inquired, anxiously.</p>
+
+<p>"You mercenary person! Stand still now, I am going to play. Well, what do
+you expect?"</p>
+
+<p>"I am not acquainted with the usual charges," he answered, "but to judge
+from the weight of the clubs&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Give me them back, then," she cried.</p>
+
+<p>"Nothing," he declared, firmly, "would induce me to relinquish them.
+I will leave the matter of remuneration entirely in your hands. I am
+convinced that you have a generous disposition."</p>
+
+<p>"The usual charge," she remarked, "is tenpence, and twopence for lunch."</p>
+
+<p>"I will take it in kind!" he said.</p>
+
+<p>She laughed gaily.</p>
+
+<p>"Give me a mashie, please."</p>
+
+<p>He peered into the bag.</p>
+
+<p>"Which of these clubs now," he asked, "rejoices in that weird name?"</p>
+
+<p>She helped herself, and played her shot.</p>
+
+<p>"I couldn't think," she said, firmly, "of paying the full price to a
+caddie who doesn't know what a mashie is."</p>
+
+<p>"I will be thankful," he murmured, "for whatever you may give me&mdash;even if
+it should be that carnation you are wearing."</p>
+
+<p>She shook her head.</p>
+
+<p>"It is worth more than tenpence," she said.</p>
+
+<p>"Perhaps by extra diligence," he suggested, "I might deserve a little
+extra. By the bye, why does your partner, Mr. Lindsay, isn't it, walk by
+himself all the time?"</p>
+
+<p>"He probably thinks," she answered, demurely, "that I am too familiar
+with my caddie."</p>
+
+<p>"You will understand," he said, earnestly, "that if my behaviour is not
+strictly correct it is entirely owing to ignorance. I have no idea as to
+the exact position a caddie should take up."</p>
+
+<p>"What a pity you are going away so soon," she said. "I might have given
+you lessons."</p>
+
+<p>"Don't tempt me," he begged. "I can assure you that without me the
+constitution of this country would collapse within a week."</p>
+
+<p>She looked at him&mdash;properly awed.</p>
+
+<p>"What a wonderful person you are!"</p>
+
+<p>"I am glad," he said, meekly, "that you are beginning to appreciate me."</p>
+
+<p>"As a caddie," she remarked, "you are not, I must confess, wholly
+perfect. For instance, your attention should be entirely devoted to the
+person whose clubs you are carrying, instead of which you talk to me and
+watch Mrs. Handsell."</p>
+
+<p>He was almost taken aback. For a pretty girl she was really not so much
+of a fool as he had thought her.</p>
+
+<p>"I deny it <i>in toto</i>!" he declared.</p>
+
+<p>"Ah, but I know you," she answered. "You are a politician, and you would
+deny anything. Don't you think her very handsome?"</p>
+
+<p>Borrowdean gravely considered the matter, which was in itself a somewhat
+humorous thing. Slim and erect, with a long, graceful neck, and a
+carriage of the head which somehow suggested the environment of a court,
+Mrs. Handsell was distinctly, even from a distance, a pleasant person to
+look upon. He nodded approvingly.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, she is good-looking," he admitted. "Is she a neighbour of yours?"</p>
+
+<p>"She has taken a house within a hundred yards of ours," Clara Mannering
+answered. "We all think that she is delightful."</p>
+
+<p>"Is she a widow?" Borrowdean asked.</p>
+
+<p>"I imagine so," she answered. "I have never heard her speak of her
+husband. She has beautiful dresses and things. I should think she must be
+very rich. Stand quite still, please. I must take great pains over this
+stroke."</p>
+
+<p>A wild shot from Clara's partner a few minutes later resulted in a
+scattering of the little party, searching for the ball. For the first
+time Borrowdean found himself near Mrs. Handsell.</p>
+
+<p>"I must have a few words with you before I go back," he said,
+nonchalantly.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<a href="images/ill2_th.jpg"><img src="images/ill2_th.jpg" alt=""/></a>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>"Say that you would like to try my motor car," she answered. "What do you
+want here?"</p>
+
+<p>"I came to see Mannering."</p>
+
+<p>"Poor Mannering!"</p>
+
+<p>"It would be," he remarked, smoothly, "a mistake to quarrel."</p>
+
+<p>They separated, and immediately afterwards the ball was found. A little
+later on the round was finished. Clara attributed her success to the
+excellence of her caddie. Mrs. Handsell deplored a headache, which had
+put her off her putting. Lindsay, who was in a bad temper, declined an
+invitation to lunch, and rode off on his bicycle. The rest of the little
+party gathered round the motor car, and Borrowdean asked preposterous
+questions about the gears and the speeds.</p>
+
+<p>"If you are really interested," Mrs. Handsell said, languidly, "I will
+take you home. I have only room for one, unfortunately, with all these
+clubs and things."</p>
+
+<p>"I should be delighted," Borrowdean answered, "but perhaps Miss
+Mannering&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Clara will look after me," Mannering interrupted, smiling. "Try to make
+an enthusiast of him, Mrs. Handsell. He needs a hobby badly."</p>
+
+<p>They started off. She leaned back in her seat and pulled her veil down.</p>
+
+<p>"Do not talk to me here," she said. "We shall have a quarter of an hour
+before they can arrive."</p>
+
+<p>Borrowdean assented silently. He was glad of the respite, for he wanted
+to think. A few minutes' swift rush through the air, and the car pulled
+up before a queer, old-fashioned dwelling house in the middle of the
+village. A smart maid-servant came hurrying out to assist her mistress.
+Borrowdean was ushered into a long, low drawing-room, with open windows
+leading out on to a trim lawn. Beyond was a walled garden bordering the
+churchyard.</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Handsell came back almost immediately. Borrowdean, turning his head
+as she entered, found himself studying her with a new curiosity. Yes, she
+was a beautiful woman. She had lost nothing. Her complexion&mdash;a little
+tanned, perhaps&mdash;was as fresh and soft as a girl's, her smile as
+delightfully full of humour as ever. Not a speck of grey in her black
+hair, not a shadow of embarrassment. A wonderful woman!</p>
+
+<p>"The one thing which we have no time to do is to stand and look at one
+another," she declared. "However, since you have tried to stare me out of
+countenance, what do you find?"</p>
+
+<p>"I find you unchanged," he answered, gravely.</p>
+
+<p>"Naturally! I have found a panacea for all the woes of life. Now what do
+you want down here?"</p>
+
+<p>"Mannering!"</p>
+
+<p>"Of course. But you won't get him. He declares that he has finished with
+politics, and I never knew a man so thoroughly in earnest."</p>
+
+<p>Borrowdean smiled.</p>
+
+<p>"No man has ever finished with politics!"</p>
+
+<p>"A platitude," she declared. "As for Mannering, well, for the first few
+weeks I felt about him as I suppose you do now. I know him better now,
+and I have changed my mind. He is unique, absolutely unique! Do you think
+that I could have existed here for nearly two months without him?"</p>
+
+<p>"May I inquire," Borrowdean asked, blandly, "how much longer you intend
+to exist here with him?"</p>
+
+<p>She shrugged her shoulders.</p>
+
+<p>"All my days&mdash;perhaps! He and this place together are an anchorage. Look
+at me! Am I not a different woman? I know you too well, my dear Leslie,
+to attempt your conversion, but I can assure you that I am&mdash;very nearly
+in earnest!"</p>
+
+<p>"You interest me amazingly," he remarked, smiling. "May I ask, does
+Mannering know you as Mrs. Handsell only?"</p>
+
+<p>"Of course!"</p>
+
+<p>"This," he continued, "is not the Garden of Eden. I may be the first, but
+others will come who will surely recognize you."</p>
+
+<p>"I must risk it," she answered.</p>
+
+<p>Borrowdean swung his eyeglass backwards and forwards. All the time he was
+thinking intensely.</p>
+
+<p>"How long have you been here?" he asked.</p>
+
+<p>"Very nearly two months," she answered. "Imagine it!"</p>
+
+<p>"Quite long enough for your little idyll," he said. "Come, you know what
+the end of it must be. We need Mannering! Help us!"</p>
+
+<p>"Not I," she answered, coolly. "You must do without him for the present."</p>
+
+<p>"You are our natural ally," he protested. "We need your help now. You
+know very well that with a slip of the tongue I could change the whole
+situation."</p>
+
+<p>"Somehow," she said, "I do not think that you are likely to make that
+slip."</p>
+
+<p>"Why not?" he protested. "I begin to understand Mannering's firmness now.
+You are one of the ropes which hold him to this petty life&mdash;to this
+philandering amongst the flower-pots. You are one of the ropes I want to
+cut. Why not, indeed? I think that I could do it."</p>
+
+<p>"Do you want a bribe?"</p>
+
+<p>"I want Mannering."</p>
+
+<p>"So do I!"</p>
+
+<p>"He can belong to you none the less for belonging to us politically."</p>
+
+<p>"Possibly! But I prefer him here. As a recluse he is adorable. I do not
+want him to go through the mill."</p>
+
+<p>"You don't understand his importance to us," Borrowdean declared. "This
+is really no light affair. Rochester and Mellors both believe in him.
+There is no limit to what he might not ask."</p>
+
+<p>"He has told me a dozen times," she said, "that he never means to sit in
+Parliament again."</p>
+
+<p>"There is no reason why he should not change his mind," Borrowdean
+answered. "Between us, I think that we could induce him."</p>
+
+<p>"Perhaps," she answered. "Only I do not mean to try."</p>
+
+<p>"I wish I could make you understand," he said impatiently, "that I am in
+deadly earnest."</p>
+
+<p>"You threaten?"</p>
+
+<p>"Don't call it that."</p>
+
+<p>"Very well, then," she declared, "I will tell him the truth myself."</p>
+
+<p>"That," he answered, "is all that I should dare to ask. He would come to
+us to-morrow."</p>
+
+<p>"You used not to underrate me," she murmured, with a glance towards the
+mirror.</p>
+
+<p>"There is no other man like Mannering," he said. "He abhors any form of
+deceit. He would forgive a murderer, but never a liar."</p>
+
+<p>"My dear Leslie," she said, "as a friend&mdash;and a relative&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Neither counts," he interrupted. "I am a politician."</p>
+
+<p>She sat quite still, looking away from him. The peaceful noises from the
+village street found their way into the room. A few cows were making
+their leisurely mid-day journey towards the pasturage, a baker's cart
+came rattling round the corner. The west wind was rustling in the elms,
+bending the shrubs upon the lawn almost to the ground. She watched them
+idly, already a little shrivelled and tarnished with their endless
+struggle for life.</p>
+
+<p>"I do not wish to be melodramatic," she said, slowly, "but you are
+forcing me into a corner. You know that I am rich. You know the people
+with whom I have influence. I want to purchase Lawrence Mannering's
+immunity from your schemes. Can you name no price which I could pay? You
+and I know one another fairly well. You are an egoist, pure and simple.
+Politics are nothing to you save a personal affair. You play the game of
+life in the first person singular. Let me pay his quittance."</p>
+
+<p>Borrowdean regarded her thoughtfully.</p>
+
+<p>"You are a strange woman," he said. "In a few months' time, when you are
+back in the thick of it all, you will be as anxious to have him there as
+we are. You will not be able to understand how you could ever have wished
+differently. This is rank sentiment, you know, which you have been
+talking. Mannering here is a wasted power. His life is an unnatural one."</p>
+
+<p>"He is happy," she objected.</p>
+
+<p>"How do you know? Will he be as happy, I wonder, when you have gone, when
+there is no longer a Mrs. Handsell? I think not! You are one of the first
+to whom I should have looked for help in this matter. You owe it to us.
+We have a right to demand it. For myself personally I have no life now
+outside the life political. I am tired of being in opposition. I want to
+hold office. One mounts the ladder very slowly. I see my way in a few
+months to going up two rungs at a time. We want Mannering. We must have
+him. Don't force me to make that slip of the tongue."</p>
+
+<p>The sound of a gong came through the open window. She rose to her feet.</p>
+
+<p>"We are keeping them waiting for luncheon," she remarked. "I will think
+over what you have said."</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_III" id="CHAPTER_III"></a>CHAPTER III</h2>
+
+<h3>WANTED&mdash;A POLITICIAN</h3>
+
+
+<p>Sir Leslie carefully closed the iron gate behind him, and looked around.</p>
+
+<p>"But where," he asked, "are the roses?"</p>
+
+<p>Clara laughed outright.</p>
+
+<p>"You may be a great politician, Sir Leslie," she declared, "but you are
+no gardener. Roses don't bloom out of doors in May&mdash;not in these parts at
+any rate."</p>
+
+<p>"I understand," he assented, humbly. "This is where the roses will be."</p>
+
+<p>She nodded.</p>
+
+<p>"That wall, you see," she explained, "keeps off the north winds, and the
+chestnut grove the east. There is sun here all the day long. You should
+come to Blakely in two months' time, Sir Leslie. Everything is so
+different then."</p>
+
+<p>He sighed.</p>
+
+<p>"You forget, my dear child," he murmured, "that you are speaking to a
+slave."</p>
+
+<p>"A slave!" she repeated. "How absurd! You are a Cabinet Minister, are
+you not, Sir Leslie?"</p>
+
+<p>He shrugged his shoulders.</p>
+
+<p>"I was once," he answered, "until an ungrateful country grew weary of the
+monotony of perfect government and installed our opponents in our places.
+Just now we are in opposition."</p>
+
+<p>"In opposition," she repeated, a little vaguely.</p>
+
+<p>"Meaning," he explained, "that we get all the fun, no responsibility,
+and, alas, no pay."</p>
+
+<p>"How fascinating," she exclaimed. "Do sit down here, and tell me all
+about it. But I forgot. You are not used to sitting down out of doors.
+Perhaps you will catch cold."</p>
+
+<p>Sir Leslie smiled.</p>
+
+<p>"I am inclined to run the risk," he said gravely, "if you will share it.
+Seriously, though, these rustic seats are rather a delusion, aren't they,
+from the point of view of comfort?"</p>
+
+<p>"There shall be cushions," she declared, "for the next time you come."</p>
+
+<p>He sighed.</p>
+
+<p>"Ah, the next time! I dare not look forward to it. So you are interested
+in politics, Miss Mannering?"</p>
+
+<p>"Well, I believe I am," she answered, a little doubtfully. "To tell you
+the truth, Sir Leslie, I am shockingly ignorant. You must live in London
+to be a politician, mustn't you?"</p>
+
+<p>"It is necessary," he assented, "to spend some part of your time there,
+if you want to come into touch with the real thing."</p>
+
+<p>"Then I am very interested in politics," she declared. "Please go on."</p>
+
+<p>He shook his head.</p>
+
+<p>"I would rather you talked to me about the roses. You should ask your
+uncle to tell you all about politics. He knows far more than I do."</p>
+
+<p>"More than you! But you have been a Cabinet Minister!" she exclaimed.</p>
+
+<p>"So was your uncle once," he answered. "So he could be again whenever he
+chose."</p>
+
+<p>She looked at him incredulously.</p>
+
+<p>"You don't really mean that, Sir Leslie?"</p>
+
+<p>"Indeed I do!" he asserted. "There was never a man within my recollection
+or knowledge who in so short a time made for himself a position so
+brilliant as your uncle. There is no man to-day whose written word
+carries so much weight with the people."</p>
+
+<p>She sighed a little doubtfully.</p>
+
+<p>"Then if that is so," she said, "I cannot imagine why we live down here,
+hundreds of miles away from everywhere. Why did he give it up? Why is he
+not in Parliament now?"</p>
+
+<p>"It is to ask him that question, Miss Mannering," Borrowdean said, "that
+I am here. No wonder it seems surprising to you. It is surprising to all
+of us."</p>
+
+<p>She looked at him eagerly.</p>
+
+<p>"You mean, then, that you&mdash;that his party want him to go back?" she
+asked.</p>
+
+<p>"Assuredly!"</p>
+
+<p>"You have told him this?"</p>
+
+<p>"Of course! It was my mission!"</p>
+
+<p>"Sir Leslie, you must tell me what he said."</p>
+
+<p>Borrowdean sighed.</p>
+
+<p>"My dear young lady," he said, "it is rather a painful subject with me
+just now. Yet since you insist, I will tell you. Something has come over
+your uncle which I do not understand. His party&mdash;no, it is his country
+that needs him. He prefers to stay here, and watch his roses blossom."</p>
+
+<p>"It is wicked of him!" she declared, energetically.</p>
+
+<p>"It is inexplicable," he agreed. "Yet I have used every argument which
+can well be urged."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, you must think of others," she begged. "If you knew how weary one
+gets of this place&mdash;a man, too, like my uncle! How can he be content? The
+monotony here is enough to drive even a dull person like myself mad. To
+choose such a life, actually to choose it, is insanity!"</p>
+
+<p>Borrowdean raised his head. He had heard the click of the garden gate.</p>
+
+<p>"They are coming," he said. "I wish you would talk to your uncle like
+this."</p>
+
+<p>"I only wish," she answered, passionately, "that I could make him feel as
+I do."</p>
+
+<p>They entered the garden, Mannering, bareheaded, following his guest.
+Borrowdean watched them closely as they approached. The woman's
+expression was purely negative. There was nothing to be learned from the
+languid smile with which she recognized their presence. Upon Mannering,
+however, the cloud seemed already to have fallen. His eyebrows were set
+in a frown. He had the appearance of a man in some manner perplexed. He
+carried two telegrams, which he handed over to Borrowdean.</p>
+
+<p>"A boy on a bicycle," he remarked, "is waiting for answers. Two telegrams
+at once is a thing wholly unheard of here, Borrowdean. You really ought
+not to have disturbed our postal service to such an extent."</p>
+
+<p>Borrowdean smiled as he tore them open.</p>
+
+<p>"I think," he said, "that I can guess their contents. Yes, I thought so.
+Can you send me to the station, Mannering?"</p>
+
+<p>"I can&mdash;if it is necessary," Mannering answered. "Must you really go?"</p>
+
+<p>Borrowdean nodded.</p>
+
+<p>"I must be in the House to-night," he said, a little wearily. "Rochester
+is going for them again."</p>
+
+<p>"You didn't take a pair?" Mannering asked.</p>
+
+<p>"It isn't altogether that," Borrowdean answered, "though Heaven knows we
+can't spare a single vote just now. Rochester wants me to speak. We are a
+used-up lot, and no mistake. We want new blood, Mannering!"</p>
+
+<p>"I trust that the next election," Mannering said, "may supply you with
+it. Will you walk round to the stables with me? I must order a cart for
+you."</p>
+
+<p>"I shall be glad to," Borrowdean answered.</p>
+
+<p>They walked side by side through the chestnut grove. Borrowdean laid his
+hand upon his friend's arm.</p>
+
+<p>"Mannering," he said, slowly, "am I to take it that you have spoken your
+last word? I am to write my mission down a failure?"</p>
+
+<p>"A failure without doubt, so far as regards its immediate object,"
+Mannering assented. "For the rest, it has been very pleasant to see you
+again, and I only wish that you could spare us a few more days."</p>
+
+<p>Borrowdean shook his head.</p>
+
+<p>"We are better apart just now, Mannering," he said, "for I tell you
+frankly that I do not understand your present attitude towards life&mdash;your
+entire absence of all sense of moral responsibility. Are you indeed
+willing to be written down in history as a philanderer in great things,
+to loiter in your flower gardens, whilst other men fight the battle of
+life for you and your fellows? Persist in your refusal to help us, if you
+will, Mannering, but before I go you shall at least hear the truth."</p>
+
+<p>Mannering smiled.</p>
+
+<p>"Be precise, my dear friend. I shall hear your view of the truth!"</p>
+
+<p>"I do not accept the correction," Borrowdean answered, quickly. "There
+are times when a man can make no mistake, and this is one of them. You
+shall hear the truth from me this afternoon, and when your days here have
+been spun out to their limit&mdash;your days of sybaritic idleness&mdash;you shall
+hear it again, only it will be too late. You are fighting against Nature,
+Mannering. You were born to rule, to be master over men. You have that
+nameless gift of genius&mdash;power&mdash;the gift of swaying the minds and hearts
+of your fellow men. Once you accepted your destiny. Your feet were firmly
+planted upon the great ladder. You could have climbed&mdash;where you would."</p>
+
+<p>A curious quietness seemed to have crept over Mannering. When he
+answered, his voice seemed to rise scarcely above a whisper.</p>
+
+<p>"My friend," he said, "it was not worth while!"</p>
+
+<p>Borrowdean was almost angry.</p>
+
+<p>"Not worth while," he repeated, contemptuously. "Is it worth while, then,
+to play golf, to linger in your flower gardens, to become a dilettante
+student, to dream away your days in the idleness of a purely enervating
+culture? What is it that I heard you yourself say once&mdash;that life apart
+from one's fellows must always lack robustness. You have the instincts of
+the creator, Mannering. You cannot stifle them. Some day the cry of the
+world to its own children will find its echo in your heart, and it may be
+too late. For sooner or later, my friend, the place of all men on earth
+is filled."</p>
+
+<p>For a moment that somewhat cynical restraint which seemed to divest of
+enthusiasm Borrowdean's most earnest words, and which militated somewhat
+against his reputation as a public speaker, seemed to have fallen from
+him. Mannering, recognizing it, answered him gravely enough, though with
+no less decision.</p>
+
+<p>"If you are right, Borrowdean," he said, "the suffering will be mine.
+Come, your time is short now. Perhaps you had better make your adieux to
+my niece and Mrs. Handsell."</p>
+
+<p>They all came out into the drive to see him start. A curious change had
+come over the bright spring day. A grey sea-fog had drifted inland, the
+sunlight was obscured, the larks were silent. Borrowdean shivered a
+little as he turned up his coat-collar.</p>
+
+<p>"So Nature has her little caprices, even&mdash;in paradise!" he remarked.</p>
+
+<p>"It will blow over in an hour," Mannering said. "A breath of wind, and
+the whole thing is gone."</p>
+
+<p>Borrowdean's farewells were of the briefest. He made no further allusion
+to the object of his visit. He departed as one who had been paying an
+afternoon call more or less agreeable. Clara waved her hand until he was
+out of sight, then she turned somewhat abruptly round and entered the
+house. Mannering and Mrs. Handsell remained for a few moments in the
+avenue, looking along the road. The sound of the horse's feet could still
+be heard, but the trap itself was long since invisible.</p>
+
+<p>"The passing of your friend," she remarked, quietly, "is almost
+allegorical. He has gone into the land of ghosts&mdash;or are we the ghosts,
+I wonder, who loiter here?"</p>
+
+<p>Mannering answered her without a touch of levity. He, too, was unusually
+serious.</p>
+
+<p>"We have the better part," he said. "Yet Borrowdean is one of those men
+who know very well how to play upon the heartstrings. A human being is
+like a musical instrument to him. He knows how to find out the harmonies
+or strike the discords."</p>
+
+<p>She turned away.</p>
+
+<p>"I am superstitious," she murmured, with a little shiver. "I suppose that
+it is this ghostly mist, and the silence which has come with it. Yet I
+wish that your friend had stayed away from Blakely!"</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>Upstairs from her window Clara also was gazing along the road where
+Borrowdean had disappeared. And Borrowdean himself was puzzling over a
+third telegram which Mannering had carelessly passed on to him with his
+own, and which, although it was clearly addressed to Mannering, he had,
+after a few minutes' hesitation, opened. It had been handed in at the
+Strand Post-office.</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>"I must see you this week.&mdash;Blanche."</p></div>
+
+<p>A few hours later, on his arrival in London, Borrowdean repeated this
+message to Mannering from the same post-office, and quietly tearing up
+the original went down to the House.</p>
+
+<p>"I cannot tell," he reported to his chief, "whether we have succeeded or
+not. In a fortnight or less we shall know."</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_IV" id="CHAPTER_IV"></a>CHAPTER IV</h2>
+
+<h3>THE DUCHESS ASKS A QUESTION</h3>
+
+
+<p>Clara stepped through the high French window, and with skirts a little
+raised crossed the lawn. Lindsay, who was following her, stopped to
+light a cigarette.</p>
+
+<p>"We're getting frightfully modern," she remarked, turning and waiting for
+him. "Mrs. Handsell and I ought to have come out here, and you and uncle
+ought to have stayed and yawned at one another over the dinner-table."</p>
+
+<p>"You have an excellent preceptress&mdash;in modernity," he remarked. "May I?"</p>
+
+<p>"If you mean smoke, of course you may," she answered. "But you may not
+say or think horrid things about my best friend. She's a dear, wonderful
+woman, and I'm sure uncle has not been like the same man since she came."</p>
+
+<p>"I'm glad you appreciate that," he answered. "Do you honestly think he's
+any the better for it?"</p>
+
+<p>"I think he's immensely improved," she answered. "He doesn't grub about
+by himself nearly so much, and he's had his hair cut. I'm sure he looks
+years younger."</p>
+
+<p>"Do you think that he seems quite as contented?"</p>
+
+<p>"Contented!" she repeated, scornfully. "That's just like you, Richard. He
+hasn't any right to be contented. No one has. It is the one absolutely
+fatal state."</p>
+
+<p>He stretched himself out upon, the seat, and frowned.</p>
+
+<p>"You're picking up some strange ideas, Clara," he remarked.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, if I am, that's better than being contented to all eternity with
+the old ones," she replied. "Mrs. Handsell is doing us all no end of
+good. She makes us think! We all ought to think, Richard."</p>
+
+<p>"What on earth for?"</p>
+
+<p>"You are really hopeless," she murmured. "So bucolic&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Thanks," he interrupted. "I seem to recognize the inspiration. I hate
+that woman."</p>
+
+<p>"My dear Richard!" she exclaimed.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, I do!" he persisted. "When she first came she was all right. That
+fellow Borrowdean seems to have done all the mischief."</p>
+
+<p>"Poor Sir Leslie!" she exclaimed, demurely. "I thought him so
+delightful."</p>
+
+<p>"Obviously," he replied. "I didn't. I hate a fellow who doesn't do things
+himself, and has a way of looking on which makes you feel a perfect
+idiot. Neither Mr. Mannering nor Mrs. Handsell&mdash;nor you&mdash;have been the
+same since he was here."</p>
+
+<p>"I gather," she said, softly, "that you do not find us improved."</p>
+
+<p>"I do not," he answered, stolidly. "Mrs. Handsell has begun to talk to
+you now about London, of the theatres, the dressmakers, Hurlingham,
+Ranelagh, race meetings, society, and all that sort of rot. She talks of
+them very cleverly. She knows how to make the tinsel sparkle like real
+gold."</p>
+
+<p>She laughed softly.</p>
+
+<p>"You are positively eloquent, Richard," she declared. "Do go on!"</p>
+
+<p>"Then she goes for your uncle," he continued, without heeding her
+interruption. "She speaks of Parliament, of great causes, of ambition,
+until his eyes are on fire. She describes new pleasures to you, and you
+sit at her feet, a mute worshipper! I can't think why she ever came here.
+She's absolutely the wrong sort of woman for a quiet country place like
+this. I wish I'd never let her the place."</p>
+
+<p>"You are a very foolish person," she answered. "She came here simply
+because she was weary of cities and wanted to get as far away from them
+as possible. Only last night she said that she would be content never to
+breathe the air of a town again."</p>
+
+<p>Lindsay tossed his cigarette away impatiently.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, I know exactly her way of saying that sort of thing!" he exclaimed.
+"A moment later she would be describing very cleverly, and a little
+regretfully, some wonderful sight or other only to be found in London."</p>
+
+<p>"Really," she declared, "I am getting afraid of you. You are more
+observant than I thought."</p>
+
+<p>"There is one gift, at least," he answered, "which we country folk are
+supposed to possess. We know truth when we see it. But I am saying more
+than I have any right to. I don't want to make you angry, Clara!"</p>
+
+<p>She shook her head.</p>
+
+<p>"You won't do that," she said. "But I don't think you quite understand.
+Let me tell you something. You know that I am an orphan, don't you? I do
+not remember my father at all, and I can only just remember my mother. I
+was brought up at a pleasant but very dreary boarding-school. I had very
+few friends, and no one came to see me except my uncle, who was always
+very kind, but always in a desperate hurry. I stayed there until I was
+seventeen. Then my uncle came and fetched me, and brought me straight
+here. Now that is exactly what my life has been. What do you think of
+it?"</p>
+
+<p>"Very dull indeed," he answered, frankly.</p>
+
+<p>She nodded.</p>
+
+<p>"I have never been in London at all," she continued. "I really only know
+what men and women are like from books, or the one or two types I have
+met around here. Now, do you think that that is enough to satisfy one? Of
+course it is very beautiful here, I know, and sometimes when the sun is
+shining and the birds singing and the sea comes up into the creeks,
+well, one almost feels content. But the sun doesn't always shine,
+Richard, and there are times when I am right down bored, and I feel as
+though I'd love to draw my allowance from uncle, pack my trunk, and go up
+to London, on my own!"</p>
+
+<p>He laughed. Somehow all that she had said had sounded so natural that
+some part of his uneasiness was already passing away.</p>
+
+<p>"Yours," he admitted, "is an extreme case. I really don't know why your
+uncle has never taken you up for a month or so in the season."</p>
+
+<p>"We have lived here for four years," she said, "and he has never once
+suggested it. He goes himself, of course, sometimes, but I am quite sure
+that he doesn't enjoy it. For days before he fidgets about and looks
+perfectly miserable, and when he comes back he always goes off for a long
+walk by himself. I am perfectly certain that for some reason or other
+he hates going. Yet he seems to have been everywhere, to know every one.
+To hear him talk with Mrs. Handsell is like a new Arabian Nights to me."</p>
+
+<p>He nodded.</p>
+
+<p>"Your uncle was a very distinguished man," he said. "I was only at
+college then, but I remember what a fuss there was in all the papers when
+he resigned his seat."</p>
+
+<p>"What did they say was the reason?" she asked, eagerly.</p>
+
+<p>"A slight disagreement with Lord Rochester, and ill-health."</p>
+
+<p>"Absurd!" she exclaimed. "Uncle is as strong as a horse."</p>
+
+<p>"Would you like him," he asked, "to go back into political life?"</p>
+
+<p>Her eyes sparkled.</p>
+
+<p>"Of course I should."</p>
+
+<p>"You may have your wish," he said, a little sadly. "I don't fancy he has
+been quite the same man since Sir Leslie Borrowdean was here, and Mrs.
+Handsell never leaves him alone for a moment."</p>
+
+<p>She laughed.</p>
+
+<p>"You talk as though they were conspirators!" she exclaimed.</p>
+
+<p>"That is precisely what I believe them to be," he answered, grimly.</p>
+
+<p>"Richard!"</p>
+
+<p>"Can't help it," he declared. "I will tell you something that I have no
+right to tell you. Mrs. Handsell is not your friend's real name."</p>
+
+<p>"Richard, how exciting!" she exclaimed. "Do tell me how you know."</p>
+
+<p>"Her solicitors told mine so when she took the farm."</p>
+
+<p>"Not her real name? But&mdash;I wonder they let it to her."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, her references were all right," he answered. "My people saw to that.
+I do not mean to insinuate for a moment that she had any improper reasons
+for calling herself Mrs. Handsell, or anything else she liked. The
+explanations given were quite satisfactory. But she has become very
+friendly with you and with your uncle, and I think that she ought to have
+told you both about it."</p>
+
+<p>"Do you know her real name?"</p>
+
+<p>"No! It is not my affair. My solicitors knew, and they were satisfied.
+Perhaps I ought not to have told you this, but&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Hush!" she said. "They are coming out. If you like you can take me down
+to the orchard wall, and we will watch the tide come in&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>Mannering came out alone and looked around. The full moon was creeping
+into the sky. The breath of wind which shook the leaves of the tall elm
+trees that shut in his little demesne from the village, was soft, and,
+for the time of year, wonderfully mild. Below, through the orchard trees,
+were faint visions of the marshland, riven with creeks of silvery sea. He
+turned back towards the room, where red-shaded lamps still stood upon the
+white tablecloth, a curiously artificial daub of color after the
+splendour of the moonlit land.</p>
+
+<p>"The night is perfect," he exclaimed. "Do you need a wrap, or are you
+sufficiently acclimatized?"</p>
+
+<p>She came out to him, tall and slender in her black dinner gown, the
+figure of a girl, the pale, passionate face of a woman, to whom every
+moment of life had its own special and individual meaning. Her eyes were
+strangely bright. There was a tenseness about her manner, a restraint in
+her tone, which seemed to speak of some emotional crisis. She passed out
+into the quiet garden, in itself so exquisitely in accordance with this
+sleeping land, and even Mannering was at once conscious of some alien
+note in these old-world surroundings which had long ago soothed his
+ruffled nerves into the luxury of repose.</p>
+
+<p>"A wrap!" she murmured. "How absurd! Come and let us sit under the cedar
+tree. Those young people seem to have wandered off, and I want to talk to
+you."</p>
+
+<p>"I am content to listen," he answered. "It is a night for listeners,
+this!"</p>
+
+<p>"I want to talk," she continued, "and yet&mdash;the words seem difficult.
+These wonderful days! How quickly they seem to have passed."</p>
+
+<p>"There are others to follow," he answered, smiling. "That is one of the
+joys of life here. One can count on things!"</p>
+
+<p>"Others for you!" she murmured. "You have pitched your tent. I came here
+only as a wanderer."</p>
+
+<p>"But scarcely a month ago," he exclaimed, "you too&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Don't!" she interrupted. "A month ago it seemed to me possible that
+I might live here always. I felt myself growing young again. I believed
+that I had severed all the ties which bound me to the days which have
+gone before. I was wrong. It was the sort of folly which comes to one
+sometimes, the sort of folly for which one pays."</p>
+
+<p>His face was almost white in the moonlight. His deep-set grey eyes were
+fixed upon her.</p>
+
+<p>"You were content&mdash;a month ago," he said. "You have been in London for
+two days, and you have come back a changed woman. Why must you think of
+leaving this place? Why need you go at all?"</p>
+
+<p>"My friend," she said, softly, "I think that you know why. It is very
+beautiful here, and I have never been happier in all my life. But one may
+not linger all one's days in the pleasant places. One sleeps through the
+nights and is rested, but the days&mdash;ah, they are different."</p>
+
+<p>"I cannot reason with you," he said. "You are too vague. Yet&mdash;you say
+that you have been contented here."</p>
+
+<p>"I have been happy," she murmured.</p>
+
+<p>"Then you must speak more plainly," he insisted, a note of passion
+throbbing in his hoarse tones. "I ask you again&mdash;why do you talk of going
+back, like a city slave whose days of holiday are over? What is there in
+the world more beautiful than the gifts the gods shower on us here? We
+have the sun, and the sea, and the wind by day and by night&mdash;this! It is
+the flower garden of life. Stay and pluck the roses with me."</p>
+
+<p>"Ah, my friend," she murmured, "if that were possible!"</p>
+
+<p>She sank down into the seat under the cedar tree. Her hands were clasped
+nervously together, her head was downcast.</p>
+
+<p>"Your words," she continued, her voice sinking almost to a whisper, yet
+lacking nothing in distinctness, "are like wine. They mount to the head,
+they intoxicate, they tempt! And yet all the time one knows that it is
+not possible. Surely you yourself&mdash;in your heart&mdash;must know it!"</p>
+
+<p>"Not I!" he answered, fiercely. "The world would have claimed me if
+it could, but I laughed at it. Our destinies are our own. With our own
+fingers we mould and shape them."</p>
+
+<p>"There is the little voice," she said, "the little voice, which rings
+even through our dreams. Life&mdash;actual, militant life, I mean&mdash;may have
+its vulgarities, its weariness and its disappointments, but it is, after
+all, the only place for men and women. The battle may be sordid, and the
+prizes tinsel&mdash;yet it is only the cowards who linger without."</p>
+
+<p>"Then let you and me be cowards," he answered. "We shall at least be
+happy."</p>
+
+<p>She shook her head a little sadly.</p>
+
+<p>"I doubt it," she answered. "Happiness is a gift, not a prize. It comes
+seldom enough to those who seek it."</p>
+
+<p>He laughed scornfully.</p>
+
+<p>"I am not a seeker," he cried. "I possess. It seems to me that all the
+beautiful things of life are here to-night. Listen! Do you hear the sea,
+the full tide sweeping softly up into the land, a long drawn out
+undernote of breathless harmonies, the rustling of leaves there in the
+elm trees, the faint night wind, like the murmuring of angels? Lift your
+head! Was there anything ever sweeter than the perfume from that hedge of
+honeysuckle? What can a man want more than these things&mdash;and&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Go on!"</p>
+
+<p>"And the woman he loves! There, I have said it. Useless words enough! You
+know very well that I love you. I meant to have said nothing just yet,
+but who could help it&mdash;on such a night as this! Don't talk of going away,
+Berenice. I want you here always."</p>
+
+<p>She held herself away from him. Her face was deathly white now. Her eyes
+questioned him fiercely.</p>
+
+<p>"Before I answer you. You were in London last week?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes."</p>
+
+<p>"Why?"</p>
+
+<p>"I had business."</p>
+
+<p>"In Chelsea, in Merton Street?"</p>
+
+<p>He gave a little gasp.</p>
+
+<p>"What do you know about that?" he asked, almost roughly.</p>
+
+<p>"You were seen there, not for the first time. The person whom you
+visited&mdash;I have heard about. She is somewhat notorious, is she not?"</p>
+
+<p>He was very quiet, pale to the lips. A strange, hunted expression had
+crept into his eyes.</p>
+
+<p>"I want to know what took you there. Am I asking too much? Remember that
+you have asked me a good deal."</p>
+
+<p>"Has Borrowdean anything to do with this?" he demanded.</p>
+
+<p>"I have known Sir Leslie Borrowdean for many years," she answered, "and
+it is quite true that we have discussed certain matters&mdash;concerning you."</p>
+
+<p>"You have known Sir Leslie Borrowdean for many years," he repeated. "Yet
+you met here as strangers."</p>
+
+<p>"Sir Leslie divined my wishes," she answered. "He knew that it was my
+wish to spend several months away from everybody, and, if possible,
+unrecognized. Perhaps I had better make my confession at once. My name
+is not Mrs. Handsell. I am the Duchess of Lenchester."</p>
+
+<p>Mannering stood as though turned to stone. The woman watched him eagerly.
+She waited for him to speak&mdash;in vain. A sudden mist of tears blinded her.
+She closed her eyes. When she opened them Mannering was gone.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_V" id="CHAPTER_V"></a>CHAPTER V</h2>
+
+<h3>THE HESITATION OF MR. MANNERING</h3>
+
+
+<p>The peculiar atmosphere of the room, heavy with the newest perfume from
+the Burlington Arcade, and the scent of exotic flowers, at no time
+pleasing to him, seemed more than usually oppressive to Mannering as he
+fidgetted about waiting for the woman whom he had come to see. He was
+conscious of a restless longing to open wide the windows, take the
+flowers from their vases, throw them into the street, and poke out the
+fire. The little room, with all its associations, its almost pathetic
+attempts at refinement, its furniture which reeked of the Tottenham Court
+Road, was suddenly hateful to him. He detested his presence there, and
+its object. He was already in a state of nervous displeasure when the
+door opened.</p>
+
+<p>The girl who entered seemed in a sense as ill in accord with such
+surroundings as himself. She was plainly dressed in black, her hair
+brushed back, her complexion pale, her eyes brilliant with a not
+altogether natural light. She regarded him with a curious mixture of fear
+and welcome. The latter, however, triumphed easily. She came towards him
+with out-stretched hand and a delightful smile.</p>
+
+<p>"You;&mdash;so soon again!" she exclaimed. "Were there&mdash;so many mistakes?"</p>
+
+<p>Mannering's face softened. He was half ashamed of his irritation. He
+answered her kindly.</p>
+
+<p>"Scarcely any, Hester," he answered. "Your typing is always excellent."</p>
+
+<p>Her anxiety was only half allayed.</p>
+
+<p>"There is nothing else wrong?" she demanded, breathlessly.</p>
+
+<p>"Nothing whatever," he assured her. "Where is your mother?"</p>
+
+<p>She sat down. The light died out of her face.</p>
+
+<p>"Out!" she answered. "Gone to Brighton for the day. What do you want with
+her?"</p>
+
+<p>"Nothing," he answered, gravely. "I only wanted to know whether we were
+likely to be interrupted."</p>
+
+<p>"She will not be in for some time," the girl answered. "She is almost
+certain to stay down there and dine."</p>
+
+<p>He nodded.</p>
+
+<p>"Hester," he asked, "do you know any one&mdash;a man named Borrowdean? Sir
+Leslie Borrowdean?"</p>
+
+<p>She shook her head a little doubtfully.</p>
+
+<p>"I have heard mother speak of him," she said.</p>
+
+<p>"He is a friend of hers, then?"</p>
+
+<p>"She met him at a supper party at the Savoy a few weeks ago," she
+answered.</p>
+
+<p>"And since?"</p>
+
+<p>"I believe so! She talks about him a great deal. Why do you ask me this?"</p>
+
+<p>"I cannot tell you, Hester," he said, gravely. "By the bye, do you think
+that she is likely to have mentioned my name to him?"</p>
+
+<p>The girl flushed up to her eyebrows.</p>
+
+<p>"I&mdash;I don't know! I am sorry," she faltered. "You know what mother is. If
+any one asked her questions she would be more than likely to answer them.
+I do hope that she has not been making mischief."</p>
+
+<p>He left her anxiety unrelieved. For some few moments he did not speak
+at all. Already he fancied that he could see the whole pitiful little
+incident&mdash;Borrowdean, diplomatic, genial, persistent, the woman a fool,
+fashioned to his own making; himself the sacrifice. Yet the meaning of it
+all was dark to him.</p>
+
+<p>She moved over to his side. Her eyes and tone were full of appeal. She
+sat close to him, her long white fingers nervously interlocked.</p>
+
+<p>"I am afraid of you. More afraid than ever to-day," she murmured. "You
+look stern, and I don't understand why you have come."</p>
+
+<p>"To see you, Hester," he answered, with a sudden impulse of kindness.</p>
+
+<p>"Ah, no!" she interrupted, choking back a little sob. "We both know so
+well that it is not that. It is pity which brings you, pity and nothing
+else. You know very well what a difference it makes to me. If I have your
+work to do, and a letter sometimes, and see you now and then, I can bear
+everything. But it is not easy. It is never easy!"</p>
+
+<p>"Of course it is not," he assented. "Hester, have you thought over what I
+said to you last time I was here?"</p>
+
+<p>She shook her head.</p>
+
+<p>"What is the use of thinking?" she asked, quietly. "I could not leave
+her."</p>
+
+<p>"You mean that she would not let you go?" Mannering asked.</p>
+
+<p>"No! It is not that," the girl answered. "Sometimes I think that she
+would be glad. It is not that."</p>
+
+<p>He nodded gravely.</p>
+
+<p>"I understand. But&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"If you understand, please do not say any more."</p>
+
+<p>"But I must, Hester," he persisted. "There is no one else to give you
+advice. I know all that you can tell me, and I say that this is no
+fitting home for you. Your mother's friends are not fit friends for you.
+She has chosen her way in life, and she will not brook any interference.
+You can do no good by remaining with her. On the contrary, you are doing
+yourself a great deal of harm. I am old enough to be your father, child.
+Wise enough, I hope, to be your adviser. You shall be my secretary, and
+come and live at Blakely."</p>
+
+<p>A faint flush stole into her an&aelig;mic. One realized then that under
+different conditions she might have been pretty. Her face was no longer
+expressionless.</p>
+
+<p>"You are so kind," she said, softly. "I shall always like to think of
+this. And yet&mdash;it is impossible."</p>
+
+<p>"Why?"</p>
+
+<p>She hesitated.</p>
+
+<p>"It is difficult to explain," she said. "But my being here makes a
+difference. I found it out once when I went away for a week. Some of&mdash;of
+mother's friends came to the house then whom she will not have when I am
+here. If I were away altogether&mdash;oh, I can't explain, but I would not
+dare to go."</p>
+
+<p>Mannering seemed to have much to say&mdash;and said nothing. This queer,
+pale-faced girl, with her earnest eyes and few simple words, had silenced
+him. She was right&mdash;right at least from her own point of view. A certain
+sense of shame suddenly oppressed him. He was acutely conscious of his
+only half-admitted reason for this visit. He had argued for himself. It
+was his own passionate desire to free himself from associations that were
+little short of loathsome which had prompted this visit. And then what he
+had dreaded most of all happened. As they sat facing one another in the
+silent, half-darkened room, Mannering trying to bring himself into accord
+with half-admitted but repugnant convictions, she watching him
+hopelessly, the tinkle of a hansom bell sounded outside. The sudden
+stopping of a horse, the rattle of a latchkey, and she was in the room.
+Mannering rose to his feet with a little exclamation.</p>
+
+<p>The woman stood and looked in upon them. She wore a pink cloth gown, a
+flower-garlanded hat, a white coaching veil, beneath which her features
+were indistinguishable. She brought with her a waft of strong perfume.
+Her figure was a living suggestion of the struggle between maturity and
+the corseti&eacute;re. Before she spoke she laughed&mdash;not altogether pleasantly.</p>
+
+<p>"You here again!" she exclaimed to Mannering. "Upon my word! I'm not a
+ghost! Hester, go and see about some tea, and a brandy and soda. Billy
+Foa brought me up on his motor, and I'm half choked with dust."</p>
+
+<p>The girl rose obediently and quitted the room. The woman untwisted her
+veil, drew out the pins from her hat, and threw both upon the sofa. Then
+she turned suddenly upon Mannering.</p>
+
+<p>"Look here," she said, "the last twice you've been here you seem to have
+carefully chosen times when I am out. I don't understand it. It can't be
+that you want to see that chit of a girl of mine. Why don't you come when
+I ask you? Why do you act as though I were something to be avoided?"</p>
+
+<p>Mannering rose to his feet.</p>
+
+<p>"I came to-day without knowing where you were," he answered, "but I will
+admit that I wished to see Hester."</p>
+
+<p>"What for?"</p>
+
+<p>"I have asked her to come and live at Blakely with my niece and myself.
+She is an excellent typist, and I require a secretary."</p>
+
+<p>The woman looked at him angrily. Without her veil she displayed features
+not in themselves unattractive, but a complexion somewhat impaired by the
+use of cosmetics. The powder upon her cheeks was even then visible.</p>
+
+<p>"What about me?" she asked, sharply.</p>
+
+<p>Mannering looked her steadily in the face.</p>
+
+<p>"I do not think," he said, "that such a life would suit you."</p>
+
+<p>She was an angry woman, and she did not become angry gracefully.</p>
+
+<p>"You mean that I'm not good enough for you and your friends in the
+country. That's what you mean, isn't it? And I should like to know, if
+I'm not, whose fault it is. Tell me that, will you?"</p>
+
+<p>Mannering flinched, though almost imperceptibly.</p>
+
+<p>"I meant simply what I said," he said. "Blakely would not suit you at
+all. We have few friends there, and our simple life would not attract you
+in the slightest. With Hester it is different. She would have her work,
+in which she takes some interest, and I believe the change would be in
+every way good for her."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, she shan't come," the woman said, throwing herself into a chair,
+and regarding him insolently. "I'm not going to live all alone&mdash;and be
+talked about. Don't stare at me like that, Lawrence. I'm the child's
+mother, am I not?"</p>
+
+<p>"It is because you are her mother," he said, quietly, "that I thought you
+might be glad to find a suitable home for her."</p>
+
+<p>"What's good enough for me ought to be good enough for her," she
+answered, doggedly.</p>
+
+<p>Mannering was silent for a moment. This woman seemed to belong to a
+different world from that with whose denizens he was in any way familiar.
+Years of isolation, and a certain epicureanism of taste, from which
+necessity had never taken the fine edge, had made him a little
+intolerant. He could see nothing that was not absolutely repulsive in
+this woman, whose fine eyes were seeking even now to attract his
+admiration. She was making the best of herself. She had chosen the
+darkest corner of the room, and her pose was not ungraceful. Her skirts
+were skilfully raised to show just as much as possible of her long,
+slender foot, with the patent shoes and silver buckles. She knew that her
+ankles were above reproach, and her dress becoming. A dozen men had paid
+her compliments during the day, yet she knew that every admiring glance,
+every whispered word which had come to her to-day, or for many days past,
+would count for nothing if only she could pierce for a single moment the
+unchanging coldness of the man who sat watching her now with the face of
+a Sphynx. A slow tide of passion welled up in her heart. Was not he a man
+and free, and was not she a woman? It was not much she asked from him, no
+pledge, no bondage. His kindness only, she told herself, was all she
+craved. She wanted him to look at her as other men looked at her. Who was
+he that he should set himself on a pedestal? Perhaps he had grown shy
+from the rust of his country life, the slow drifting apart from the world
+of men and women. Perhaps&mdash;she rose swiftly to her feet and crossed the
+room.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<a href="images/ill3_th.jpg"><img src="images/ill3_th.jpg" alt=""/></a>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_VI" id="CHAPTER_VI"></a>CHAPTER VI</h2>
+
+<h3>SACRIFICE</h3>
+
+
+<p>She leaned over him, one hand on the back of his chair, the other seeking
+in vain for his.</p>
+
+<p>"Lawrence," she said, "you grow colder and more unkind every day. What
+have I done to change you so? I am a foolish woman, I know, but there are
+things which I cannot forget."</p>
+
+<p>He rose at once to his feet, and stood apart from her.</p>
+
+<p>"I thought," he said, "I believed that we understood one another."</p>
+
+<p>She laughed softly.</p>
+
+<p>"I am very sure that I do not understand you," she said. "And as for
+you&mdash;I do not believe that you have ever understood any woman. There was
+a time, Lawrence&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>His impassivity was gone. He threw out his hands.</p>
+
+<p>"Remember," he said, "there is a promise between us. Don't break it.
+Don't dare to break it!"</p>
+
+<p>She looked at him curiously. A new idea concerning this man and his
+avoidance of her crept into her mind. It was at least consoling to her
+vanity, and it left her a chance. She had roused him too, at last, and
+that was worth something.</p>
+
+<p>"Why not?" she asked, moving a step towards him. "It was a foolish
+promise. It has done neither of us any good. It has spoilt a part of my
+life. Why should I keep silence, and let it go on to the end? Do you know
+what it has made of me, this promise?"</p>
+
+<p>He shrank back.</p>
+
+<p>"Don't! I have done all I could!"</p>
+
+<p>"All you could!" she repeated, scornfully. "You drew a diagram of your
+duty, and you have moved like a machine along the lines. You talk like a
+Pharisee, Lawrence! Come! You knew me years ago! Do you find me changed?
+Tell me the truth."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," he admitted, "you are changed."</p>
+
+<p>She nodded.</p>
+
+<p>"You admit that. Perhaps, perhaps," she continued more slowly, "there are
+things about me now of which you don't approve. My friends are a little
+fast, I go out alone, I daresay people have said things. There, you see
+I am very frank. I mean to be! I mean you to know that whatever I am, the
+fault is yours."</p>
+
+<p>"You are as God or the Devil made you," he answered, hardly. "You are
+what you would have become, in any case."</p>
+
+<p>"Lawrence!"</p>
+
+<p>Already he hated the memory of his words. True or not, they were spoken
+to a woman who was cowering under them as under a lash. He was at a
+disadvantage now. If she had met him with anger they might have cried
+quits. But he had seen her wince, seen her sudden pallor, and it was not
+a pleasant sight.</p>
+
+<p>"Forgive me," he said. "I do not know quite what I am saying. You have
+broken a compact which I had hoped might have lasted all our days. Let us
+be better friends, if you will, but let us keep that promise which we
+made to one another."</p>
+
+<p>"It was so many years ago," she said, in a low tone. "I am afraid to
+think how many. It makes me lonely, Lawrence, to look ahead. I am afraid
+of growing old!"</p>
+
+<p>He looked at her steadily. Yes, the signs were there. She was a
+good-looking woman to-day, a handsome woman in some lights, but she had
+reached the limit. It was a matter of a few years at most, and then&mdash;He
+stood with his hands behind his back.</p>
+
+<p>"It is a fear which we must all share," he said, quietly. "The only
+antidote is work."</p>
+
+<p>"Work!" she repeated, scornfully. "That is the man's resource. What about
+us? What about me?"</p>
+
+<p>"It is no matter of sex," he declared. "We all make our own choice. We
+are what we make of ourselves."</p>
+
+<p>"It is not true," she answered, bluntly. "Not with us, at any rate. We
+are what our menkind make of us. Oh, what cowards you all are."</p>
+
+<p>"Cowards?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes. You do what mischief you choose, and then soothe your conscience
+with platitudes. You will take hold of pleasure with both hands, but your
+shoulders are not broad enough for the pack of responsibility. Don't look
+at me as though I were a mile off, Lawrence, as though this were simply
+an impersonal discussion. I am speaking to you&mdash;of you. You avoid me
+whenever you can. I don't often get a chance of speaking to you. You
+shall listen now. You live the life of a poet and a scholar, they tell
+me. You live in a beautiful home, you take care that nothing ugly or
+disturbing shall come near you. You are pleased with it, aren't you? You
+think yourself better than other men. Well, you are making a big mistake.
+A man doesn't have to answer for his own life only. He has to carry the
+burden of the lives his influence has wrecked and spoilt. I know just
+what you think of me. I am a middle-aged woman, clinging to my youth and
+pleasures&mdash;the sort of pleasures for which you have a vast contempt.
+There isn't an hour of my days of which you wouldn't disapprove. I'm not
+your sort of woman at all. And yet I was all right once, Lawrence, and
+what I am now&mdash;" she paused, "what I am now&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>Hester came in, followed by a maid with the tea-tray. She looked from
+one to the other a little anxiously. The atmosphere of the room seemed
+charged with electricity. Mannering's face was grey. Her mother was
+nervously crumpling into a ball her tiny lace handkerchief. Mrs.
+Phillimore rose abruptly from her seat.</p>
+
+<p>"Have you got the brandy and soda, Hester?" she asked.</p>
+
+<p>"I'm afraid I forgot it, mother," the girl answered. "Mayn't I make you
+some Russian tea? I've had the lemon sliced."</p>
+
+<p>The woman laughed, a little unnaturally.</p>
+
+<p>"What a dutiful daughter," she exclaimed. "That's right! I want looking
+after, don't I? I'll have the tea, Hester, but send it up to my room. I'm
+going to lie down. That wretched motoring has given me a headache, and
+I'm dining out to-night. Good-bye, Mr. Mannering, if I don't see you
+again."</p>
+
+<p>She nodded, without glancing in his direction, and left the room. The
+maid arranged the tea-tray and departed. Hester showed no signs of being
+aware that anything unusual had happened. She made a little desultory
+conversation. Mannering answered in monosyllables.</p>
+
+<p>When at last he put his cup down he rose to go.</p>
+
+<p>"You are quite sure, Hester," he said. "You have made up your mind?"</p>
+
+<p>She, too, rose, and came over to him.</p>
+
+<p>"You know that I am right," she answered, quietly. "The life you offer me
+would be paradise, but I dare not even think of it. I may not do any good
+here, perhaps I don't, but I can't come away."</p>
+
+<p>"You are a true daughter of your sex," he said, smiling. "The keynote of
+your life must be sacrifice."</p>
+
+<p>"Perhaps we are not so unwise, after all," she answered, "for I think
+that there are more happy women in the world than men."</p>
+
+<p>"There are more, I think, who deserve to be, dear," he answered, holding
+her hand for a moment. "Good-bye!"</p>
+
+<p>Mannering walked in somewhat abstracted fashion to the corner of the
+street, and signalled for a hansom. With his foot upon the step he
+hesitated.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_VII" id="CHAPTER_VII"></a>CHAPTER VII</h2>
+
+<h3>THE DUCHESS'S "AT HOME"</h3>
+
+
+<p>"The perfect man," the Duchess murmured, as she stirred her tea, "does
+not exist. I know a dozen perfect women, dear, dull creatures, and plenty
+of men who know how to cover up the flaw. But there is something in the
+composition of the male sex which keeps them always a little below the
+highest pinnacle."</p>
+
+<p>"It is purely a matter of concealment," her friend declared. "Women are
+cleverer humbugs than men."</p>
+
+<p>Borrowdean shrugged his shoulders.</p>
+
+<p>"I know your perfect woman!" he remarked, softly. "You search for her
+through the best years of your life, and when you have found her you
+avoid her. That," he added, handing his empty cup to a footman, "is why
+I am a bachelor."</p>
+
+<p>The Duchess regarded him complacently.</p>
+
+<p>"My dear Sir Leslie," she said, "I am afraid you will have to find a
+better reason for your miserable state. The perfect woman would certainly
+have nothing to do with you if you found her."</p>
+
+<p>"On the contrary," he declared, confidently, "I am convinced that she
+would find me attractive."</p>
+
+<p>The Duchess shook her head.</p>
+
+<p>"Your theory," she declared, "is antiquated. Like and unlike do not
+attract. We seek in others the qualities which we strive most zealously
+to develop in ourselves. I know a case in point."</p>
+
+<p>"Good!" Sir Leslie remarked. "I like examples. The logic of them appeals
+to me."</p>
+
+<p>The Duchess half closed her eyes. For a moment she was silent. She seemed
+to be listening to something a long way off. Through the open windows of
+her softly shaded drawing-rooms, odourous with flowers, came the rippling
+of water falling from a fountain in the conservatory, the lazy hum of a
+mowing machine on the lawn, the distant tinkling of a hansom bell in the
+Square. But these were not the sounds which for a moment had changed her
+face.</p>
+
+<p>"I myself," she murmured, "am an example!"</p>
+
+<p>A woman who had risen to go sat down again.</p>
+
+<p>"Do go on, Duchess!" she exclaimed. "Anything in the nature of a personal
+confession is so fascinating, and you know you are such an enigma to all
+of us."</p>
+
+<p>"Am I?" she answered, smiling. "Then I am likely to remain so."</p>
+
+<p>"A perfectly obvious person like myself," the woman remarked, "is always
+fascinated by the unusual. But if you are really not going to give
+yourself away, Duchess, I am afraid I must move on. One hates to leave
+your beautifully cool rooms. Shall I see you to-night, I wonder, at
+Esholt House?"</p>
+
+<p>"Perhaps!"</p>
+
+<p>There were still many people in the room. Some fresh arrivals occupied
+his hostess's attention, and Borrowdean, with a resigned shrug of the
+shoulders, prepared to depart. He had come, hoping for an opportunity to
+be alone for a few minutes with the Duchess, and himself a skilful
+tactician in such small matters, he could not but admire the way she had
+kept him at arm's length. And then the opportunity for a master stroke
+came. A servant sought him out with a card. A man of method, he seldom
+left his rooms without instructions as to where he was to be found.</p>
+
+<p>"The gentleman begged you to excuse his coming here, sir," the man
+whispered, confidentially, "but he is returning to the country this
+evening, and was anxious to see you. He is quite ready to wait your
+convenience."</p>
+
+<p>Borrowdean held the card in his hand, scrutinizing it with impassive
+face. Was this a piece of unparalleled good fortune, or simply a trick of
+the fates to tempt him on to catastrophe? With that wonderful swiftness
+of thought which was part of his mental equipment he balanced the
+chances&mdash;and took his risk.</p>
+
+<p>"I should be glad," he said, looking the servant in the face, "if you
+would show the gentleman up here as an ordinary visitor. I should like to
+find you down stairs when I come out. You understand?"</p>
+
+<p>"Perfectly, sir," the man answered, and withdrew.</p>
+
+<p>Mannering had no idea whose house he was in. The address Borrowdean's
+servant had given him had been simply 81, Grosvenor Square. Nevertheless,
+he was conscious of a little annoyance as he followed the servant up the
+broad stairs. He would much have preferred waiting until Borrowdean had
+concluded his call. He remembered his grey travelling clothes, and all
+his natural distaste for social amenities returned with unabated force as
+he neared the reception-rooms and heard the softly modulated rise and
+fall of feminine voices, the swishing of silks and muslin, the faint
+perfume of flowers and scents which seemed to fill the air. At the last
+moment he would have withdrawn, but his guide seemed deaf. His words
+passed unheeded. His name, very softly but very distinctly, had been
+announced. He had no option but to pass into the room and play the cards
+which fate and his friend had dealt him.</p>
+
+<p>Borrowdean rose to greet his friend. Mannering, not knowing who his
+hostess might be, and feeling absolutely no curiosity concerning her,
+confined his attention wholly to the man whom he had come to seek.</p>
+
+<p>"I did not wish to disturb you here, Borrowdean," he said, quickly, "but
+if your call is over, could you come away for a few minutes? I have a
+matter to discuss with you."</p>
+
+<p>Borrowdean smiled slightly, and laid his hand upon the other's shoulder.</p>
+
+<p>"By all means, Mannering," he answered. "But since you have discovered
+our little secret, don't you think that you had better speak to our
+hostess?"</p>
+
+<p>Mannering was puzzled, but his eyes followed Borrowdean's slight gesture.
+Berenice, who at the sound of his voice had suddenly abandoned her
+conversation and risen to her feet, was within a few feet of him. A
+sudden light swept into Mannering's face.</p>
+
+<p>"You!" he exclaimed softly.</p>
+
+<p>Her hands went out towards him. Borrowdean, with an almost imperceptible
+movement, checked his advance.</p>
+
+<p>"So you see we are found out, after all, Duchess," he said, turning to
+her. "You have known Mrs. Handsell, Mannering, let me present you now to
+her other self. Duchess, you see that our recluse has come to his senses
+at last. I must really introduce you formally: Mr. Mannering&mdash;the Duchess
+of Lenchester."</p>
+
+<p>Berenice, arrested in her forward movement, watched Mannering's face
+eagerly. So carefully modulated had been Borrowdean's voice that no word
+of his had reached beyond their own immediate circle. It was as though a
+silent tableau were being played out between the three, and Mannering, to
+whom repression had become a habit, gave little indication of anything he
+might have felt. Borrowdean's fixed smile betokened nothing but an
+ordinary interest in the introduction of two friends, and the Duchess's
+back was turned towards her friends. They both waited for Mannering to
+speak.</p>
+
+<p>"This," he said, slowly, "is a surprise! I had no idea when I called to
+see Borrowdean here, of the pleasure which was in store for me."</p>
+
+<p>Borrowdean dropped his eyeglass.</p>
+
+<p>"Are you serious, my dear Mannering?" he exclaimed. "Do you mean to say
+that you came here&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Only to see you," Mannering interrupted. "That you should know perfectly
+well. I am sorry to hurry you out, but the few minutes' conversation
+which I desired with you is of some importance, and my train leaves in
+an hour. I hope that you will pardon me," he added, looking steadily at
+Berenice, "if I hurry away one of your guests."</p>
+
+<p>She laughed quite in her natural manner.</p>
+
+<p>"I will forgive anything," she said, "except that you should hurry away
+yourself so unceremoniously. Come and sit down near me. I want to talk to
+you about Blakeley."</p>
+
+<p>She swept her gown on one side, disclosing a vacant place on the settee
+where she had been sitting. For a second her eyes said more to him than
+her courteous but half-careless words of invitation. Mannering made no
+movement forward.</p>
+
+<p>"I am sorry," he said, "but it is impossible for me to stay!"</p>
+
+<p>She seemed to dismiss him and the whole subject with a careless little
+shrug of the shoulders, which was all the farewell she vouchsafed to
+either of them. A woman who had just entered seemed to absorb her whole
+attention. The two men passed out.</p>
+
+<p>Mannering spoke no word until they stood upon the pavement. Then he
+turned almost savagely upon his companion.</p>
+
+<p>"This is a trick of yours, I suppose!" he exclaimed. "Damn you and your
+meddling, Borrowdean. Why can't you leave me and my affairs alone? No,
+I am not going your way. Let us separate here!"</p>
+
+<p>Borrowdean shook his head.</p>
+
+<p>"You are unreasonable, Mannering," he said. "I have done only what I
+believe you were on your way to ask me to do. I have brought you and
+Berenice together again. It was for both your sakes. If there has been
+any misunderstanding between you, it would be better cleared up."</p>
+
+<p>Mannering gripped his arm.</p>
+
+<p>"Let us go to your rooms, Borrowdean," he said. "It is time we understood
+one another."</p>
+
+<p>"Willingly!" Borrowdean said. "But your train?"</p>
+
+<p>"Let my train go," Mannering answered. "There are some things I have to
+say to you."</p>
+
+<p>Borrowdean called a hansom. The two men drove off together.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_VIII" id="CHAPTER_VIII"></a>CHAPTER VIII</h2>
+
+<h3>THE MANNERING MYSTERY</h3>
+
+
+<p>Borrowdean was curter than usual, even abrupt. The calm geniality of his
+manner had departed. He spoke in short, terse sentences, and he had the
+air of a man struggling to subdue a fit of perfectly reasonable and
+justifiable anger. It was a carefully cultivated pose. He even refrained
+from his customary cigarette.</p>
+
+<p>"Look here, Mannering," he said, "there are times when a few plain words
+are worth an hour's conversation. Will you have them from me?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes!"</p>
+
+<p>"This thing was started six months ago, soon after those two
+bye-elections in Yorkshire. Even the most despondent of us then saw that
+the Government could scarcely last its time. We had a meeting and we
+attempted to form on paper a trial cabinet. You know our weakness. We
+have to try to form a National party out of a number of men who, although
+they call themselves broadly Liberals, are as far apart as the very poles
+of thought. It was as much as they could do to sit in the same room
+together. From the opening of the meeting until its close, there was but
+one subject upon which every one was unanimous. That was the absolute
+necessity of getting you to come back to our aid."</p>
+
+<p>"You flatter me," Mannering said, with fine irony.</p>
+
+<p>"You yourself," Borrowdean continued, without heeding the interruption,
+"encouraged us. From the first pronouncement of this wonderful new policy
+you sprang into the arena. We were none of us ready. You were! It is true
+that your weapon was the pen, but you reached a great public. The country
+to-day considers you the champion of Free Trade."</p>
+
+<p>"Pass on," Mannering interrupted, brusquely. "All this is wasted time!"</p>
+
+<p>"A smaller meeting," Borrowdean continued, "was held with a view of
+discussing the means whereby you could be persuaded to rejoin us. At that
+meeting the Duchess of Lenchester was present."</p>
+
+<p>Mannering, who had been pacing the room, stopped short. He grasped the
+back of a chair, and turning round faced Borrowdean.</p>
+
+<p>"Well?"</p>
+
+<p>"You know what place the Duchess has held in the councils of our party
+since the Duke's death," Borrowdean continued. "She has the political
+instinct. If she were a man she would be a leader. All the great ladies
+are on the other side, but the Duchess is more than equal to them all.
+She entertains magnificently, and with tact. She never makes a mistake.
+She is part and parcel of the Liberal Party. It was she who volunteered
+to make the first effort to bring you back."</p>
+
+<p>Mannering turned his head. Apparently he was looking out of the window.</p>
+
+<p>"Her methods," Borrowdean continued, "did not commend themselves to us,
+but beggars must not be choosers. Besides, the Duchess was in love with
+her own scheme. Such objections as we made were at once overruled."</p>
+
+<p>He paused, but Mannering said nothing. He was still looking out of the
+window, though his eyes saw nothing of the street below, or the great
+club buildings opposite. A scent of roses, lost now and then in the
+salter fragrance of the night breeze sweeping over the marshes, the magic
+of a wonderful, white-clad presence, the low words, the sense of a world
+apart, a world of speechless beauty.... What empty dreams! A palace built
+in a poet's fancy upon a quicksand.</p>
+
+<p>"The Duchess," Borrowdean continued, "undertook to discover from you what
+prospects there were, if any, of your return to political life. She took
+none of us into her confidence. We none of us knew what means she meant
+to employ. She disappeared. She communicated with none of us. We none of
+us had the least idea what had become of her. Time went on, and we began
+to get a little uneasy. We had a meeting and it was arranged that I
+should come down and see you. I came, I saw you, I saw the Duchess! The
+situation very soon became clear to me. Instead of the Duchess converting
+you, you had very nearly converted the Duchess."</p>
+
+<p>"I can assure you&mdash;" Mannering began.</p>
+
+<p>"Let me finish," Borrowdean pleaded. "I realized the situation at a
+glance. Your attitude I was not so much surprised at, but the attitude of
+the Duchess, I must confess, amazed me. I came to the conclusion that I
+had found my way into a forgotten corner of the world, where the lotos
+flowers still blossomed, and the sooner I was out of it the better. Now I
+think that brings us, Mannering, up to the present time."</p>
+
+<p>Mannering turned from the window, out of which he had been steadfastly
+gazing. There was a strained look under his eyes, and little trace of the
+tan upon his, cheeks. He had the air of a jaded and a weary man.</p>
+
+<p>"That is all, then," he remarked. "I can still catch my train."</p>
+
+<p>Borrowdean held out his hand.</p>
+
+<p>"No," he said. "It is not all. This explanation I have made for your
+sake, Mannering, and it has been a truthful and full one. Now it is my
+turn. I have a few words to say to you on my own account."</p>
+
+<p>Mannering paused. There was a note of something unusual in Borrowdean's
+voice, a portent of things behind. Mannering involuntarily straightened
+himself. Something was awakened in him which had lain dormant for many
+years&mdash;dormant since those old days of battle, of swift attack, of
+ambushed defence and the clamour of brilliant tongues. Some of the old
+light flashed in his eyes.</p>
+
+<p>"Say it then&mdash;quickly!"</p>
+
+<p>"We speak of great things," Borrowdean continued, "and the catching of a
+train is a trifle. My wardrobe and house are at your service. Don't hurry
+me!"</p>
+
+<p>Mannering smiled.</p>
+
+<p>"Go on!" he said.</p>
+
+<p>"The men who count in this world," Borrowdean declared, calmly lighting
+a cigarette, "are either thinkers of great thoughts or doers of great
+deeds. To the former belong the poets and the sentimentalists; to the
+latter the statesmen and the soldiers."</p>
+
+<p>"What have I done," Mannering murmured, "that I should be sent back to
+kindergarten? Platitudes such as this bore me. Let me catch my train."</p>
+
+<p>"In a moment. To all my arguments and appeals, to all my entreaties to
+you to realize yourself, to do your duty to us, to history and to
+posterity, you have replied in one manner only. You have spoken from the
+mushroom pedestal of the sentimentalist. Not a single word that has
+fallen from your lips has rung true. You have spoken as though your eyes
+were blind all the time to the letters of fire which truth has spelled
+out before you. Any further argument with you is useless, because you are
+not honest. You conceal your true position, and you adopt a false
+defence. Therefore, I relinquish my task. You can go and grow your roses,
+and think your poetry, and call it life if you will. But before you go I
+should like you to know that I, at least, am not deceived. I do not
+believe in you, Mannering. I ask you a question, and I challenge you to
+answer it. What is your true reason for making a scrap-heap of your
+career?"</p>
+
+<p>"Are you my friend," Mannering asked, quietly, "that you wish to pry
+behind the curtain of my life? If I have other reasons they concern
+myself alone."</p>
+
+<p>Borrowdean shook his head. He had scored, but he took care to show no
+sign of triumph.</p>
+
+<p>"The issue is too great," he said, "to be tried by the ordinary rules
+which govern social life. Will you presume that I am your friend, and let
+us consider the whole matter afresh together?"</p>
+
+<p>"I will not," Mannering answered. "But I will do this. I will answer your
+question. There is another reason which makes my reappearance in public
+life impossible. Not even your subtlety, Borrowdean, could remove it. I
+do not even wish it removed. I mean to live my own life, and not to be
+pitchforked back into politics to suit the convenience of a few
+adventurous office-seekers, and the Duchess of Lenchester!"</p>
+
+<p>"Mannering!"</p>
+
+<p>But Mannering had gone.</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>Borrowdean felt that this was a trying day. After a battle with Mannering
+he was face to face with an angry woman, to whose presence an imperious
+little note had just summoned him. Berenice was dressed for a royal
+dinner party, and she had only a few minutes to spare. Nevertheless she
+contrived to make them very unpleasant ones for Borrowdean.</p>
+
+<p>"The affair was entirely an accident," he pleaded.</p>
+
+<p>"It was nothing of the sort," she answered, bluntly. "I know you too well
+for that. Your bringing him here without warning was an unwarrantable
+interference with my affairs."</p>
+
+<p>Borrowdean could hold his own with men, but Berenice in her own room,
+a wonderful little paradise of soft colourings and luxury so perfectly
+chosen that it was rather felt than seen; Berenice, in her marvellous
+gown, with the necklace upon her bosom and the tiara flashing in her dark
+hair, was an overwhelming opponent. Borrowdean was helpless. He could not
+understand the attack itself. He failed altogether to appreciate its
+tenour.</p>
+
+<p>"Forgive me," he protested, "but I did not know that you had any plans.
+All that you told us on your return from Blakely was that you had failed.
+So far as you were concerned the matter seemed to me to be over, and with
+it, I imagined, your interest in Mannering. I brought him here&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Well?"</p>
+
+<p>"Because I wished him to know who you were. I wished him to understand
+the improbability of your ever again returning to Blakely."</p>
+
+<p>"You are telling the truth now, at any rate," she remarked, curtly, "or
+what sounds like the truth. Why did you trouble in the matter at all?
+Where I have failed you are not likely to succeed."</p>
+
+<p>Borrowdean smiled for the first time.</p>
+
+<p>"I have still some hopes of doing so," he admitted.</p>
+
+<p>The Duchess glanced at the little Louis Seize time-piece, and hesitated.</p>
+
+<p>"You had better abandon them," she said. "Lawrence Mannering may be
+wrong, or he may be right, but he believes in his choice. He has no
+ambition. You have no motive left to work upon."</p>
+
+<p>Borrowdean shook his head.</p>
+
+<p>"You are wrong, Duchess," he remarked, simply. "I never believed in
+Mannering's sentimentality. To-day, with his own lips, he has confessed
+to me that another, an unbroached reason, stands behind his refusal!"</p>
+
+<p>"And he never told me," the Duchess murmured, involuntarily.</p>
+
+<p>"Duchess," Borrowdean answered, with a faint, cynical parting of the
+lips, "there are matters which a man does not mention to the woman in
+whose high opinion he aims at holding an exalted place."</p>
+
+<p>There was a knock at the door. The Duchess's maid entered, carrying a
+long cloak of glimmering lace and satin.</p>
+
+<p>The Duchess nodded.</p>
+
+<p>"I come at once, Hortense," she said, in French. "Sir Leslie," she added,
+turning towards him, "you are making a great mistake, and I advise you to
+be careful. You are one of those who think ill of all men. Such men as
+Lawrence Mannering belong to a race of human beings of whom you know
+nothing. I listened to you once, and I was a fool. You could as soon
+teach me to believe that you were a saint, as that Mannering had anything
+in his past or present life of which he was ashamed. Now, Hortense."</p>
+
+<p>Borrowdean walked off, still smiling. How simple half the world was.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_IX" id="CHAPTER_IX"></a>CHAPTER IX</h2>
+
+<h3>THE PUMPING OF MRS. PHILLIMORE</h3>
+
+
+<p>Hester sprang to her feet eagerly as she heard the front door close, and
+standing behind the curtain she watched the man, who was already upon the
+pavement looking up and down the street for a hansom. His erect,
+distinguished figure was perfectly familiar to her. It was Sir Leslie
+Borrowdean again.</p>
+
+<p>She resumed her seat in front of the typewriter, and touched the keys
+idly. In a few moments what she had been expecting happened. Her mother
+entered the room.</p>
+
+<p>Of her advent there were the usual notifications. An immense rustling
+of silken skirts, and an overwhelming odour of the latest Bond Street
+perfume. She flung herself into a chair, and regarded her daughter with
+a complacent smile.</p>
+
+<p>"That delightful man has been to see me again," she exclaimed. "I could
+scarcely believe it when Mary brought me his card. By the bye, where is
+Mary? I want her to try to take that stain out of my pink silk skirt. I
+shall have to wear it to-night."</p>
+
+<p>"I will ring for her directly," the girl answered. "So that was Sir
+Leslie Borrowdean, mother! Why did he come to see you again so soon?"</p>
+
+<p>"I haven't the least idea," Mrs. Phillimore announced, "but I thought
+it was very sweet of him. It seems all the more remarkable when one
+considers the sort of man he is. He's very ambitious, you know, and
+devoted to politics."</p>
+
+<p>"Where did you meet him first?" Hester asked.</p>
+
+<p>"It was at the Metropole at Bexhill," Mrs. Phillimore answered. "We
+motored down there one day, and Lena Roberts told me that she heard him
+inquiring who I was directly we came into the room. He joined our party
+at luncheon. Billy knew him slightly, so I made him go over and ask him."</p>
+
+<p>Hester nodded, and seemed to be absorbed in some trifling defect of one
+of the keys of her typewriter.</p>
+
+<p>"Does he still ask you many questions about Mr. Mannering, mother?" she
+asked, quietly.</p>
+
+<p>"About Mr. Mannering!" Mrs. Phillimore repeated, with raised eyebrows.
+"Why, he scarcely ever mentions his name."</p>
+
+<p>She took up a small mirror from the table by her side, and critically
+touched her hair.</p>
+
+<p>"About Mr. Mannering, indeed," she repeated. "Why do you ask me such a
+question?"</p>
+
+<p>The girl hesitated.</p>
+
+<p>"Do you really want to know, mother?" she asked.</p>
+
+<p>"Of course!"</p>
+
+<p>"When Mr. Mannering was here last," Hester said, "he asked me whether Sir
+Leslie Borrowdean was a friend of yours. I fancy that they are political
+acquaintances, but I don't think that they are on very good terms."</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Phillimore laid down the mirror and yawned.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, there's nothing very strange about that," she declared. "Lawrence
+isn't the sort to get on with many people, especially since he went and
+buried himself in the country. How pale you are looking, child. Why don't
+you go and take a walk, instead of hammering away at that old typewriter?
+Any one would think that you had to do it for a living!"</p>
+
+<p>"I prefer to earn my own living," the girl answered, "and I am not in the
+least tired. Tell me, are you going to see Sir Leslie Borrowdean again,
+mother?"</p>
+
+<p>The woman on the couch smoothed her hair once more, with a smile of
+gratification.</p>
+
+<p>"Sir Leslie has asked me to join a small party of friends for dinner at
+the Carlton this evening," she announced. "Why on earth are you looking
+at me like that, child? You're always grumbling that my friends are a
+fast lot, and don't suit you. You can't say anything against Sir Leslie."</p>
+
+<p>The girl had risen to her feet. The trouble in her face was manifest.</p>
+
+<p>"Mother," she said, slowly, "I wish that you were not going. I wish that
+you would have nothing whatever to do with Sir Leslie Borrowdean."</p>
+
+<p>"Good Heavens!&mdash;and why not?" the woman exclaimed, suddenly sitting up.</p>
+
+<p>"I believe that he only asked you because he has an idea that you can
+tell him&mdash;something he wants to know about Mr. Mannering," the girl
+answered, steadily. "I don't think that you ought to go!"</p>
+
+<p>"Rubbish!" her mother answered, crossly. "I don't believe that he has
+such an idea in his head. As though he couldn't ask me for the sake of my
+company. And if he does ask me questions, I'm not obliged to answer them,
+am I? Do you think that I'm to be turned inside out like a schoolgirl?"</p>
+
+<p>"Sir Leslie is very clever, and he is very unscrupulous," the girl
+answered. "I wish you weren't going! I believe that he wants to find out
+things."</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Phillimore frowned uneasily.</p>
+
+<p>"I'm not a fool!" she said. "He's welcome to all he can get to know
+through me. I don't know what you want to try to make me uncomfortable
+for, Hester, I'm sure. Sir Leslie has never betrayed the least curiosity
+about Mr. Mannering, and I don't believe that he's any such idea in his
+head. Upon my word I don't see why you should think it impossible that
+Sir Leslie should come here just for the sake of improving an
+acquaintance which he found pleasant. That's what he gave me to
+understand, and he put it very nicely too!"</p>
+
+<p>"I do not think that Sir Leslie is that sort of man, mother."</p>
+
+<p>"And I don't see how you know anything about it," was the sharp response.
+"Ring the bell, please. I want to speak to Mary about my skirt."</p>
+
+<p>"You mean to dine with him then, mother?" she asked, crossing the room
+towards the bell.</p>
+
+<p>"Of course! I've accepted. To-night and as often as he chooses to ask me.
+Now don't upset me, please. I want to look my best to-night, and if I get
+angry my hair goes all out of curl."</p>
+
+<p>The girl went back to her typewriter. She unfolded a sheet of copy, and
+placed it on the stand before her.</p>
+
+<p>"If you have made up your mind, mother, I suppose you will go," she said.
+"Still&mdash;I wish you wouldn't."</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Phillimore shrugged her shoulders.</p>
+
+<p>"If I did what you wished all the time," she remarked, pettishly, "I
+might as well drown myself at once. Can't you understand, Hester?" she
+added, with a sudden change of manner, "that I must do something to help
+me to forget? You don't want to see me go mad, do you?"</p>
+
+<p>The girl turned half round in her chair. She was fronting a mirror. She
+caught a momentary impression of herself&mdash;pallid, hollow-eyed, weary. She
+sighed.</p>
+
+<p>"There are other ways of forgetting," she murmured. "There is work."</p>
+
+<p>Her mother laughed scornfully.</p>
+
+<p>"You have chosen your way," she said, "let me choose mine. Turn round,
+Hester."</p>
+
+<p>The girl obeyed her languidly. Her mother eyed her with an attention she
+seldom vouchsafed to anything. Her plain black frock was ill-fitting and
+worn. She wore no ribbon or jewellery or adornment of any sort.
+Negatively her face was not ill-pleasing, but her figure was angular, and
+her complexion almost an&aelig;mic. The woman on the couch represented other
+things. She was tastefully, though somewhat elaborately dressed. She wore
+chains and trinkets about her neck, rings upon her fingers, and in her
+face had begun in earnest the tragic struggle between an actual forty and
+presumptive twenty. She laughed again, a little hardly.</p>
+
+<p>"And you are my daughter," she exclaimed. "You are one of the freaks of
+heredity. I'm perfectly certain you don't belong to me, and as for him&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Stop!" the girl cried.</p>
+
+<p>The woman nodded.</p>
+
+<p>"Quite right," she said. "I didn't mean to mention him. I won't again.
+But we are different, aren't we? I wonder why you stay with me. I wonder
+you don't go and make a home for yourself somewhere. I know that you hate
+all the things I do, and care for, and all my friends. Why don't you go
+away? It would be more comfortable for both of us!"</p>
+
+<p>"I have no wish to go away," the girl said, softly, "and I don't think
+that we interfere with one another very much, do we? This is the first
+time I have ever made a remark about any&mdash;of your friends. To-night I
+cannot help it. Sir Leslie Borrowdean is Mr. Mannering's enemy. I am sure
+of it! That is why I do not like the idea of your going out with him. It
+doesn't seem to be right&mdash;and I am afraid."</p>
+
+<p>"Afraid! You little idiot!"</p>
+
+<p>"Sir Leslie Borrowdean is a very clever man," the girl said. "He is a
+very clever man, and he has been a lawyer. That sort of person knows how
+to ask questions&mdash;to&mdash;find out things."</p>
+
+<p>"Rubbish!" the woman remarked, sitting up on the couch. "Why do you try
+to make me so uncomfortable, Hester? Sir Leslie may be very clever, but
+I am not exactly a fool myself."</p>
+
+<p>She spoke confidently, but under the delicate coating of rouge her cheeks
+had whitened.</p>
+
+<p>"Besides," she continued, "Sir Leslie has never even mentioned Mr.
+Mannering's name in anything except the most casual way. You don't
+understand everything, Hester. Of course Lena and Billy Aswell and Rothe
+and all of them are all right, but they are just a little&mdash;well, you
+would call it fast, and it does one good to be seen with a different set
+sometimes. Sir Leslie Borrowdean and his friends are altogether
+different, of course."</p>
+
+<p>The girl bent over her work.</p>
+
+<p>"No doubt, mother," she answered, "There's Mary stamping on the floor.
+I expect she has your bath ready."</p>
+
+<p>An hour or so later Mrs. Phillimore departed in a hired brougham.
+Her hair had been carefully arranged by a local expert who had an
+establishment in the next street, her pink silk gown had come through the
+ordeal of cleansing with remarkable success, and the heels on her new
+evening shoes resembled more than anything else, miniature stilts. Her
+face was wreathed in smiles, and she possessed the good conscience and
+light heart of a woman who feels that she has made a successful toilette.
+All the vague misgivings of a short while ago had vanished. She gave her
+hair a final touch in the side window of the carriage as she drove off,
+and quite forgot to wave her hand to Hester, who was standing at the
+window to see her go. If any misgivings remained at all between the two,
+they were not with her. She settled herself back amongst the cushions
+with a little sigh of content. Sir Leslie was a most charming person, and
+evidently not at all insensible to her charms. She was sure that she was
+going to have a delightful evening.</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>Borrowdean, if he possessed no conscience, was not altogether free from
+some kindred eccentricity. He was reminded sharply enough of the fact
+about one o'clock the next morning, when the door of the little house on
+Merton Street was suddenly opened before he could touch the bell. Framed
+in a little slanting gleam of light, Hester, still wearing her plain
+black gown, stood and looked at him. His careless words of explanation
+died away upon his lips. The fire which flashed from her hollow eyes
+seemed to wither up the very sources of speech within him. The half
+lights were kind to her. He saw nothing of the hollow cheeks. The
+weariness of her pose and manner had passed like magic away. She stood
+there, erect as a dart, her head thrown back, a curious mixture of scorn,
+of loathing, and of fear in her expression. She looked at him steadily,
+and he felt his cheeks burn. He was ashamed&mdash;ashamed of himself, ashamed
+of his errand.</p>
+
+<p>"Your mother," he said, struggling to look away from her, "is&mdash;a little
+unwell. The heat of the room&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>She swept down the steps and passed him. Before he could reach her side
+she was tugging at the handle of the carriage door.</p>
+
+<p>"Mother," she cried, through the window, "undo the door!"</p>
+
+<p>But Mrs. Phillimore made no answer. When at last the door was opened she
+was discovered half asleep in a corner. Her hair was in some disorder,
+and her cheeks no longer preserved that even colouring which is a result
+of the artistic use of the rouge-pot. Her head was thrown back, and she
+was apparently asleep. Hester stifled a sob. She took her mother by the
+arm, and shook her.</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Phillimore sat up and smiled a sleepy smile. She made a few
+incoherent remarks. They helped her into the house and into an
+easy-chair, where she promptly turned her face towards the cushions and
+resumed her slumber. Sir Leslie moved towards the door, then hesitated.</p>
+
+<p>"Miss Phillimore," he said, "I cannot tell you how sorry I am that this
+should have happened."</p>
+
+<p>She was on her knees before her mother. She turned and rose slowly to
+her feet. Sir Leslie never quite forgot her gesture as she motioned him
+towards the door. It was one of the most uncomfortable moments of his
+life.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<a href="images/ill4_th.jpg"><img src="images/ill4_th.jpg" alt=""/></a>
+</div>
+
+<p>"I am afraid&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>She did not speak a word, yet Sir Leslie obeyed what seemed to him more
+eloquent than words. He turned and left the room and the house. Without
+any change in her tense expression she waited until she heard him go.
+Then she sank upon her knees on the hearthrug, and hid her face in her
+hands.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_X" id="CHAPTER_X"></a>CHAPTER X</h2>
+
+<h3>THE MAN WITH A MOTIVE</h3>
+
+
+<p>Mannering sat alone in the shade of his cedar tree. He had walked in his
+rose-garden amongst a wilderness of drooping blossoms, for the season of
+roses was gone. He had crossed the marshland seawards, only to find a
+little crowd of holiday-makers in possession of the golf links and the
+green tufted stretch of sandy shore. The day had been long, almost
+irksome. A fit of restlessness had driven him from his study. He seemed
+to have lost all power of concentration. For once his brain had failed
+him. The shadowy companions who stood ever between him and solitude
+remained uninvoked. His cigar had burnt out between his fingers. He threw
+it impatiently away. These were the days, the hours he dreaded.</p>
+
+<p>Clara came down the garden from the house, and seeing him, crossed the
+lawn and sat down beside him.</p>
+
+<p>"Why, my dear uncle," she exclaimed, "you look almost as dull as I feel!
+Let us be miserable together!"</p>
+
+<p>"With all my heart," he answered. "Whilst we are about it, can we invent
+a cause?"</p>
+
+<p>"Invent!" she repeated. "I do not think we need either of us look very
+far. Every one seems to have gone away whose presence made this place
+endurable. Uncle, do you know when Mrs. Handsell is coming back? She
+promised to write, and I have never heard a word!"</p>
+
+<p>Mannering turned his head. A little rustling wind had stolen in from
+seaward. Above their heads flights of sea-gulls were floating out towards
+the creeks. He watched them idly until they dropped down.</p>
+
+<p>"I do not think that she will come back at all," he said, quietly.
+"I heard to-day that the place was to let again."</p>
+
+<p>"And Sir Leslie Borrowdean?"</p>
+
+<p>"I think you may take it for granted," Mannering remarked, dryly, "that
+we shall see no more of him."</p>
+
+<p>The girl leaned back and sighed.</p>
+
+<p>"Uncle, what is it that makes you such a hermit?" she asked.</p>
+
+<p>"Age, perhaps, and experience," he answered, lightly. "There are not many
+people in the world, Clara, who are worth while!"</p>
+
+<p>"Mrs. Handsell was worth while," she murmured.</p>
+
+<p>Mannering did not reply.</p>
+
+<p>"And Sir Leslie Borrowdean," she continued, "was more than just worth
+while. I think that he was delightful."</p>
+
+<p>"Very young ladies, and very old ones," Mannering remarked, grimly,
+"generally like Borrowdean."</p>
+
+<p>"And what about Mrs. Handsell?" she asked, with a spice of malice in her
+tone.</p>
+
+<p>"Mrs. Handsell," Mannering answered, coolly, "was a very charming woman.
+Since both these people have passed out of our lives, Clara, I scarcely
+see why we need discuss them."</p>
+
+<p>"One must talk about something," she answered. "At least I must talk, and
+you must pretend to listen. I positively cannot exist in the house by
+myself any longer."</p>
+
+<p>"Where is Richard?" Mannering asked.</p>
+
+<p>"Gone into Norwich to dine at the barracks with some stupid men. Not that
+I mind his going," she added, hastily. "I wish he'd stay away for a
+month. Of course he's a very good sort, and all that, but he's deadly
+monotonous. Uncle, really, as a matter of curiosity, before I get to be
+an old woman I should like to see one other young man."</p>
+
+<p>"Plenty on the links just now!"</p>
+
+<p>"I know it. I sat out near the ninth hole all this morning. There are
+some Cambridge boys who looked quite nice. One of them was really
+delightful when I showed him where his ball was, but I can't consider
+that an introduction, can I? Heavens, who's this?"</p>
+
+<p>Behind the trim maid-servant already crossing the lawn, and within a few
+yards of them, came a strange, almost tragical, figure. Her plain black
+clothes and hat were powdered with dust, there were deep lines under her
+eyes, she swayed a little when she walked, as though with fatigue. She
+seemed to bring with her into the cool, quiet garden, with its country
+odours and general air of peace, an alien note. One almost heard the deep
+undercry from a far-away world of suffering&mdash;the great, ever-moving
+wheels seemed to have caught her up and thrown her down in this most
+incongruous of places. Clara, in her cool white dress, her fresh
+complexion, her general air of health and girlish vigour, seemed, as she
+rose to her feet, a creature of another sex, almost of another world. The
+two girls exchanged for a moment wondering glances. Then Mannering
+intervened.</p>
+
+<p>"Hester!" he exclaimed. "Why&mdash;is there anything wrong?"</p>
+
+<p>"Nothing&mdash;very serious," she answered. "But I had to see you. I thought
+that I had better come."</p>
+
+<p>He held out his hands.</p>
+
+<p>"You have had a tiring journey," he said. "You must come into the house
+and let them find you something to eat. Clara, this is Hester Phillimore,
+the daughter of an old friend of mine. Will you see about a room for her,
+and lend her anything she requires?"</p>
+
+<p>"Of course," Clara answered. "Won't you come into the house with me?" she
+added pleasantly to the girl. "You must be horribly tired travelling this
+hot weather, and this is such an out-of-the-way corner of the world!"</p>
+
+<p>Hester lingered for a moment, glancing nervously at Mannering.</p>
+
+<p>"I must go back to-night," she said. "I only came because I thought that
+it would be quicker than writing."</p>
+
+<p>"To-night?" he exclaimed. "But, my dear girl, that is impossible. There
+are no trains, and you are tired out already. Go into the house with my
+niece, and we will have a talk afterwards."</p>
+
+<p>He walked across the lawn with them, talking pleasantly to Hester,
+as though her visit were in no sense of the word unpleasant, or an
+extraordinary event. But when he returned to his seat under the cedar
+tree his whole expression was changed. The lines about his face had
+insensibly deepened. He leaned a little forward, looking with weary,
+unseeing eyes into the tangled shrubbery. Had all men, he wondered, this
+secret chapter in their lives&mdash;the one sore place so impossible to
+forget, the cupboard of shadows never wholly closed, shadows which at any
+moment might steal out and encompass his darkening life? He sat there
+motionless, and his thoughts travelled backwards. There were many things
+in his life which he had forgotten, but never this. Every word that had
+been spoken, every detail in that tragic little scene seemed to glide
+into his memory with a distinctness and amplitude which time had never
+for one second dimmed. So it must be until the end. He forgot the girl
+and her errand. He forgot the carefully cultivated philosophy which for
+so many years had helped him towards forgetfulness. So he sat until the
+sound of their voices upon the lawn recalled him to the present.</p>
+
+<p>"I will leave you to have your talk with uncle," Clara said. "Afterwards
+I will come back to you. There he is, sitting under the cedar tree."</p>
+
+<p>The girl came swiftly over to his side. For a moment the compassion which
+he had always felt for her swept away the memory of his own sorrow. Her
+pallid, colourless face had lost everything except expression. If the
+weariness, which seemed to have found a home in her eyes, was just now
+absent, it was because a worse thing was shining out of them&mdash;a fear,
+of which there were traces even in her hurried walk and tone. He rose at
+once and held out his hands.</p>
+
+<p>"Come and sit down, Hester," he said, "and don't look so frightened."</p>
+
+<p>She obeyed him at once.</p>
+
+<p>"I am frightened," she said, "because I feel that I ought not to have
+come here, and yet I thought that you ought to know at once what has
+happened. Sir Leslie Borrowdean has been coming to see mother. Last night
+he took her out to dinner. She came home&mdash;late&mdash;she was not quite
+herself. This morning she was frightened and hysterical. She said&mdash;that
+she had been talking."</p>
+
+<p>"To Sir Leslie Borrowdean?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes."</p>
+
+<p>Mannering showed no signs of dismay. He took the girl's thin white hand
+in his, and held it almost affectionately.</p>
+
+<p>"I am very glad to know this at once, dear," he said, "and you did what
+was right and kind when you came to see me. But Sir Leslie Borrowdean has
+no reason to make himself my enemy. On the contrary, just now he seems
+particularly anxious to cultivate my friendship."</p>
+
+<p>"Then why," the girl asked, "has he gone out of his way to&mdash;to&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>Mannering stopped her.</p>
+
+<p>"He had a motive, of course. Borrowdean is one of those men who do
+nothing without a motive. I believe that I can even guess what it is.
+Don't let this thing distress you too much, Hester. I do not think that
+we have anything to worry about."</p>
+
+<p>"But he knows!"</p>
+
+<p>"I could not imagine a man," Mannering answered, "better able to keep a
+secret."</p>
+
+<p>The girl sat silent for a moment.</p>
+
+<p>"I suppose I have been an idiot," she remarked.</p>
+
+<p>"You have been nothing of the sort," Mannering asserted, firmly. "You
+have done just what is kind, and what will help me to save the situation.
+I must confess that I should not like to have been taken by surprise. You
+have saved me from that. Now let us put the whole subject away for a
+time. How I wish that you could stay here for a few days."</p>
+
+<p>The girl smiled a little piteously.</p>
+
+<p>"I ought not to have left her even for so long as this," she said. "I
+must go back to-morrow morning by the first train."</p>
+
+<p>He nodded. He felt that it was useless to combat her resolution.</p>
+
+<p>"You and I," he said, gravely, "have both our burdens to carry. Only it
+seems a little unfair that Providence should have made my back so much
+the broader. Listen, Hester!"</p>
+
+<p>The full murmur of the sea growing louder and louder as the salt water
+flowed up into the creeks betokened the change of tide. Faint wreaths of
+mist were rising up from over the shadowy marshland. Above them were the
+stars. He laid his hand upon her shoulder.</p>
+
+<p>"Dear child!" he said, "I think that you understand how it is that the
+burden, after all, is easier for me. A man may forget his troubles here,
+for all the while there is this eternal background of peaceful things."</p>
+
+<p>Her hand stole into his.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," she murmured, "I understand. Don't let them ever bring you away."</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XI" id="CHAPTER_XI"></a>CHAPTER XI</h2>
+
+<h3>MANNERING'S ALTERNATIVE</h3>
+
+
+<p>Once again Mannering found himself in the over-scented, overheated room,
+which was perhaps of all places in the world the one he hated the most.
+Fresh from the wind-swept places of his country home, he found the
+atmosphere intolerable. After a few minutes' waiting he threw open the
+windows and leaned out. Hester was walking in the Square somewhere. He
+had a shrewd idea that she had been sent out of the way. With a restless
+impatience of her absence he awaited the interview which he dreaded.</p>
+
+<p>Her mother's coming took him a little by surprise. She seemed to have
+laid aside all her usual customs. She entered the room quietly. She
+greeted him almost nervously. She was dressed, without at any rate any
+obvious attempt to attract, in a plain black gown, and with none of the
+extravagances in which she sometimes delighted. Her usual boisterous
+confidence of manner seemed to have deserted her. Her face, without its
+skilful touches of rouge, looked thin, and almost peaked.</p>
+
+<p>"I am so glad that you came, Lawrence," she said. "It was very good of
+you."</p>
+
+<p>She glanced towards the opened windows, and he closed them at once.</p>
+
+<p>"I am afraid," he said, "that you have not been well!"</p>
+
+<p>There was a touch of her old self in the hardness of her low laugh.</p>
+
+<p>"It is remorse!" she declared. "I think that for once in my life I have
+permitted myself to think! It is a great mistake. One loses confidence
+when one realizes what a beast one is."</p>
+
+<p>He waited in silence. It seemed to him the best thing. She sat down a
+little wearily. He remained standing a few feet away.</p>
+
+<p>"I have given you away, Lawrence," she said, quietly.</p>
+
+<p>"So," he remarked, "I understand."</p>
+
+<p>"Hester has told you, of course. I am not blaming her. She did quite
+right. Only I should have told you myself. I wanted to be the first to
+assure you of this. Our secret is quite safe. The man&mdash;with whom I made
+a fool of myself&mdash;has given me his word of honour."</p>
+
+<p>"Sir Leslie Borrowdean's&mdash;word of honour!" Mannering remarked, with slow
+scorn. "Do you know the man, I wonder?"</p>
+
+<p>"I know that he wishes to be your friend, and not your enemy," she said.</p>
+
+<p>"He chooses his friends for what they are worth to him," Mannering
+answered. "It is all a matter of self-interest. He has some idea of
+making me the stepping-stone to his advancement. I have a place just now
+in his scheme of life. But as for friendship! Borrowdean does not know
+the meaning of the word."</p>
+
+<p>"You speak bitterly," she remarked.</p>
+
+<p>"I know the man," he answered.</p>
+
+<p>"Will you tell me," she asked, "what it is that he wants of you?"</p>
+
+<p>He shrugged his shoulders.</p>
+
+<p>"Is this worth discussing between us?" he asked.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes."</p>
+
+<p>"Very well, then, you shall know. He wants me to re-enter political life,
+to be the jackal to pull the chestnuts out of the fire for him."</p>
+
+<p>"To re-enter political life! And why don't you?"</p>
+
+<p>Mannering turned abruptly round and looked her in the face. He had been
+gazing out of the window, wondering how long it would be before Hester
+returned.</p>
+
+<p>"Why don't I!" he repeated, a little vaguely. "How can you ask me such a
+question as that?"</p>
+
+<p>She was undisturbed. Again he marvelled at the change in her.</p>
+
+<p>"Is it so very extraordinary a question?" she said. "I have often
+wondered whether you meant to content yourself with your present life
+always. It is scarcely worthy of you, is it? You were born to other
+things than to live the life of a country gentleman. You dabble in
+literature, they say, and poke your stick into politics through the pages
+of the reviews. Why don't you take your coat off and play the game?"</p>
+
+<p>Mannering was silent for several moments. He was, however, meditating his
+own reply less than studying his questioner. Her attitude was amazing to
+him. She watched him all the time, frowning.</p>
+
+<p>"You are not usually so tongue-tied," she remarked, irritably. "Have you
+nothing to say to me?"</p>
+
+<p>"I am wondering," he said, quietly, "what has given birth to this sudden
+interest in my proceedings. What does it matter to you how my days are
+spent, or what manner of use I make of them?"</p>
+
+<p>"There was a time&mdash;" she began.</p>
+
+<p>"A time irretrievably past," he interrupted, shortly.</p>
+
+<p>"I am not so sure!" she declared, doubtfully.</p>
+
+<p>"What has Borrowdean to do with this?" he asked her, abruptly.</p>
+
+<p>"Borrowdean?"</p>
+
+<p>"Surely! Some one has been putting notions into your head."</p>
+
+<p>"Why take that for granted?" she asked, equably. "The pity of the whole
+thing is obvious enough, isn't it? Sometimes I think that we were a pair
+of fools. We played into the hands of fate. We were brought face to face
+with a terrible situation. Instead of meeting it bravely we played the
+coward. Why don't you forget, Lawrence, as I have done? Take up your work
+again. Set a seal upon&mdash;that memory."</p>
+
+<p>"I have outgrown my ambitions," he answered. "Life was hot enough in my
+veins then. Desire grows cold with the years. I am content."</p>
+
+<p>"But I," she answered, "am not."</p>
+
+<p>"We each chose our life," he reminded her.</p>
+
+<p>"Perhaps. I am not satisfied with my choice. You may be with yours."</p>
+
+<p>"I am."</p>
+
+<p>She leaned over towards him.</p>
+
+<p>"Once," she said, "you offered me what you called&mdash;atonement. I refused
+it. Just then it seemed horrible. Now that feeling has passed away. I am
+lonely, Lawrence, and I am weary of the sort of life I have been living.
+Supposing I asked you to make me that offer again?"</p>
+
+<p>Mannering turned slowly towards her. He was not a man who easily showed
+emotion, but there were traces of it now in his face. The hand which
+rested on the back of his chair shook. There was in his eyes the look of
+a man who sees evil things.</p>
+
+<p>"It is too late, Blanche," he said. "You cannot be in earnest?"</p>
+
+<p>"Why not?" she murmured, dropping her eyes. "I am tired of my life. What
+you owed me then you owe me now. Why should it be too late? I am not an
+old woman yet, nor are you an old man, and I am weary of being alone."</p>
+
+<p>Mannering walked to the window. His hand went to his forehead. It was
+damp and cold. He was afraid! If she were in earnest! And she spoke like
+a woman who knew her mind. She was always, he remembered, a creature of
+caprice. If she were really in earnest!</p>
+
+<p>"We have drifted too far apart, Blanche," he said, making an effort to
+face the situation. "Years ago this might have been possible. To-day it
+would be a dismal failure. My ways are not yours. The life I lead would
+bore you to death."</p>
+
+<p>"There is no reason why you should not alter it," she answered, calmly.
+"In fact, I should wish you to. Blakely all the year round would be an
+impossibility. You could come and live in London."</p>
+
+<p>He looked at her fixedly.</p>
+
+<p>"Have you forgotten?" he asked.</p>
+
+<p>She covered her face with her hands for a moment. If indeed she really
+felt any emotion it passed quickly away, for when she looked up again
+there were no traces left.</p>
+
+<p>"I have forgotten nothing," she declared, defiantly. "Only the horror and
+fear of it all has passed away. I don't see why I should suffer all my
+life. In fact, I don't mean to. I don't want to be a miserable, lonely
+old woman. I want a home, something different from this."</p>
+
+<p>Mannering faced her gravely.</p>
+
+<p>"Blanche," he said, "you are proposing something which would most surely
+ruin the rest of our lives. What we might have been to one another if
+things had been different it is hard to say. But this much is very
+certain. We belong now to different worlds. We have drifted apart with
+the years. Even the little we see of one another now is far from a
+pleasure to either of us. What you are suggesting would be simply
+suicidal."</p>
+
+<p>She was silent. He watched her anxiously. As a rule her face was easy
+enough to read. To-day it was impenetrable. He could not tell what was
+passing behind that still, almost stony, look. Her silence forced him
+again into speech.</p>
+
+<p>"You agree with me, surely, Blanche? You must agree with me?"</p>
+
+<p>She raised her head.</p>
+
+<p>"I am not sure that I do," she answered. "But at least I understand you.
+That is something! You want to go on as you are&mdash;apart from me. That is
+true, isn't it?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes!"</p>
+
+<p>She nodded.</p>
+
+<p>"At least you are candid. You want your liberty&mdash;unfettered. What are you
+willing to pay for it?"</p>
+
+<p>He looked at her incredulously.</p>
+
+<p>"I do not quite understand!" he said.</p>
+
+<p>She laughed, and the laugh belonged to her old self.</p>
+
+<p>"Indeed! I thought that I was explicit enough, brutally explicit, even.
+What have you to offer me in place of your name and yourself? What
+sacrifice are you prepared to make?"</p>
+
+<p>He looked at her furtively, as though even then he doubted the
+significance of her words.</p>
+
+<p>"You have already half my income," he said, slowly.</p>
+
+<p>She shrugged her shoulders.</p>
+
+<p>"A thousand a year! What can one do on that? To live decently in town one
+needs much more."</p>
+
+<p>"It is as much as I can offer," he remarked, stiffly.</p>
+
+<p>"Then you should earn money," she declared. "It's easy enough for men
+with brains. Go back into politics instead of idling your time away down
+in Blakely. I mean it! I've no patience with men who have a right to a
+place in the world which they won't fill."</p>
+
+<p>"Surely," he remonstrated, "I may be allowed to choose the manner of my
+life!"</p>
+
+<p>"If you can afford to&mdash;yes," she answered. "But I want one of two things.
+The first seems to scare you to death even to think of. The second is
+more money&mdash;a good deal more money."</p>
+
+<p>"But," he protested, "even if I did as you suggested, and went back into
+politics, it would be some time, if ever, before I should be any better
+off."</p>
+
+<p>"I will wait until that time comes," she answered, "provided that when it
+does, you share with me."</p>
+
+<p>Then Mannering understood.</p>
+
+<p>"Upon my word," he exclaimed, "you are an apt conspirator indeed. All
+this time you have been fooling me. I even fancied&mdash;bah! How much is
+Borrowdean giving you for this?"</p>
+
+<p>"Nothing at all," she answered, coolly. "It is my own sincere desire
+for your welfare which has prompted all that I have said to you. I am
+ambitious for you, Lawrence. I should like to see you Prime Minister.
+I am sure you could be if you tried. You are letting your talents rust,
+and I don't approve of it!"</p>
+
+<p>The faint note of mockery in her tone was clearly apparent. Mannering
+found it hard to answer her calmly.</p>
+
+<p>"Come," he said, "put it into plain words. What does it mean? What do you
+want?"</p>
+
+<p>"Sir Leslie tells me," she said, raising her eyes and looking him in the
+face, "that his party is prepared to find you a safe seat to-morrow. I
+want you to give up your hermit's life and accept it."</p>
+
+<p>"And the alternative?"</p>
+
+<p>"You have it already before you. Your reception of it was not, I must
+admit, altogether flattering."</p>
+
+<p>"I am allowed," he said, "some short space of time for consideration?"</p>
+
+<p>"Until to-morrow, if you wish," she answered. "I imagine you know pretty
+well what you mean to do."</p>
+
+<p>He picked up his hat and turned towards the door.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," he said, "I suppose I do!"</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2>BOOK II</h2>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_Ia" id="CHAPTER_Ia"></a>CHAPTER I</h2>
+
+<h3>BORROWDEAN MAKES A BARGAIN</h3>
+
+
+<p>Borrowdean sank into the chair which Berenice had indicated, with a
+little sigh of relief.</p>
+
+<p>"These all-night sittings," he remarked, "get less of a joke as one
+advances in years. You read the reports this morning?"</p>
+
+<p>She nodded.</p>
+
+<p>"And Mannering's speech?"</p>
+
+<p>"Every word of it."</p>
+
+<p>"Our little conspiracy," he continued, "is bearing fruit. Honestly,
+Mannering is a surprise, even to me. After these years of rust I scarcely
+expected him to step back at once into all his former brilliancy. His
+speech last night was wonderful."</p>
+
+<p>"I heard it," she said. "You are quite right. It was wonderful."</p>
+
+<p>"You were in the House?" he asked, looking up quickly.</p>
+
+<p>"I was there till midnight," she answered.</p>
+
+<p>Borrowdean was thoughtful for a moment.</p>
+
+<p>"His speech," he remarked, "sounded even better than it read."</p>
+
+<p>"I thought so," she admitted. "He has all the smaller tricks of the
+orator, as well as the gift of eloquence. One can always listen to him
+with pleasure."</p>
+
+<p>"Will you pardon me," Borrowdean asked, "if I make a remark which may
+sound a little impertinent? You and Mannering were great friends at
+Blakely. On my first visit there you will remember that you did not
+attempt to conceal that there was more than an ordinary intimacy between
+you. Yet to-day I notice that there are indications on both your parts of
+a desire to avoid one another as much as possible. It seems to me a pity
+that you two should not be friends. Is there any small misunderstanding
+which a common friend&mdash;such as I trust I may call myself&mdash;might help
+to smooth away?"</p>
+
+<p>Berenice regarded him thoughtfully.</p>
+
+<p>"It is strange," she said, "that you should talk to me like this, you who
+are certainly responsible for any estrangement there may be between Mr.
+Mannering and myself. Please answer me this question. Why do you wish us
+to be friends?"</p>
+
+<p>Borrowdean shrugged his shoulders.</p>
+
+<p>"You and he and myself, with about a dozen others," he answered, "form
+the backbone of a political party. As time goes on we shall in all
+probability be drawn closer and closer together. It seems to me best that
+our alliance should be as real a thing as possible."</p>
+
+<p>Berenice smiled.</p>
+
+<p>"Rather a sentimental attitude for you, Sir Leslie," she remarked. "Have
+you ever considered the fact that any coolness there may be between
+Lawrence Mannering and myself is entirely due to you?"</p>
+
+<p>"To me!" he exclaimed.</p>
+
+<p>"Exactly! At Blakely we were on terms of the most intimate friendship. I
+had grown to like and respect him more than any man I had ever met. I
+don't know exactly why I should take you so far into my confidence, but I
+am inclined to do so. Our friendship seemed likely to develop into&mdash;other
+things."</p>
+
+<p>"My dear Duchess&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Don't interrupt me! I have an idea that you were perfectly aware of it.
+Perhaps it did not suit your plans. At any rate, you made statements to
+me concerning him which, as you very well knew, were likely to alter my
+entire opinion of him. I had an idea that there was some code of honour
+between men which kept them from discussing the private life of their
+friends with a woman. You seem to have been troubled with no such
+scruples. You told me things about Lawrence Mannering which made it
+absolutely necessary that I should hear them confirmed or denied from his
+own lips."</p>
+
+<p>"You would rather have remained in ignorance, then?" he asked.</p>
+
+<p>"I would rather have remained in ignorance," she repeated, calmly. "Don't
+flatter yourself, Sir Leslie, that a woman ever has any real gratitude in
+her heart for the person who, out of friendship, or some other motive,
+destroys her ideals. I should have married Lawrence Mannering if you had
+not spoken."</p>
+
+<p>Borrowdean was silent. In his heart he was thinking how nearly one of the
+most cherished schemes of his life had gone awry.</p>
+
+<p>"I am afraid, then," he said, "that even at the risk of your further
+displeasure I have no regrets to offer you."</p>
+
+<p>"I do not desire your regrets," she answered, scornfully. "You did what
+it suited you to do, and I presume you are satisfied. As for the rest, I
+can assure you that the relations between Mr. Mannering and myself are
+such that the balance of your political apple-cart is not likely to be
+disturbed. Now let us talk of something else. I have said all that I have
+to say on this matter&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>Sir Leslie was not entirely satisfied with the result of his afternoon
+call. He walked slowly from Grosvenor Square to a small house in Sloane
+Gardens, in front of which a well-appointed victoria was waiting. He
+looked around at the well-filled window-boxes, thick with geraniums and
+marguerites, at the coachman's new livery, at the evidences of luxury
+which met him the moment the door was opened, and his lips parted in a
+faint, unpleasant smile.</p>
+
+<p>"Poor Mannering," he murmured to himself. "What a millstone!"</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Phillimore was at home. She would certainly see Sir Leslie, the
+trim parlour-maid thought, with a smile. She left him alone in a
+flower-scented drawing-room, crowded with rococo furniture and many
+knick-knacks, where he waited more or less impatiently for nearly twenty
+minutes. Then Mrs. Phillimore swept into the room, elaborately gowned for
+her drive in the park, dispersing perfumes in all directions and
+bestowing a dazzling smile upon him.</p>
+
+<p>"I felt very much inclined not to see you at all," she declared. "How
+dared you keep away from me all this time? You haven't been near me since
+I moved in here. What do you think of my little house?"</p>
+
+<p>"Charming!" he declared.</p>
+
+<p>"Every one likes it," she remarked. "Such a time I had choosing the
+furniture. Hester wouldn't help with a single thing. You know that she
+has left me?"</p>
+
+<p>"I understood that she had gone to Mr. Mannering as secretary," he
+answered. "She has done typing for him for some time, hasn't she?"</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Phillimore nodded.</p>
+
+<p>"Worships him, the little fool!" she remarked. "I must admit I detest
+clever men. You are all so dull, and such scheming brutes, too."</p>
+
+<p>Borrowdean smiled. A certain rough-and-ready humour about this woman
+always appealed to him. He looked around.</p>
+
+<p>"You seem to have done very nicely with that little offering," he said.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, ready money goes a long way," she declared, carelessly.</p>
+
+<p>"And when it is spent?" he asked. "Five thousand pounds is not an
+inexhaustible sum."</p>
+
+<p>"By the time it is spent," she answered, "your party will be in, and I
+suppose you will make Lawrence something."</p>
+
+<p>Borrowdean regarded the woman thoughtfully.</p>
+
+<p>"Has it ever occurred to you," he asked, "that the time is likely to come
+when Mannering might want his money for himself? He might want to marry,
+for instance."</p>
+
+<p>She laughed mirthlessly, but without a shade of uneasiness.</p>
+
+<p>"You don't know Lawrence," she declared, scornfully. "He'd never do that
+whilst I was alive."</p>
+
+<p>"I am not so sure," Borrowdean answered, calmly. "Between ourselves,
+I cannot see that your claim upon him amounts to very much."</p>
+
+<p>"Then you're a fool!" she declared, brusquely.</p>
+
+<p>"No, I'm not," Borrowdean assured her, blandly. "Now I fancy that I could
+tell you something which would surprise you very much."</p>
+
+<p>"Has he been making love to any one?" she asked, quickly.</p>
+
+<p>"Something of the sort," he admitted. "Mannering is quixotic, of course,
+and that hermit life of his down in Norfolk has made him more so. Now he
+has come back again into the world it is just possible that he may see
+things differently. I flatter myself that I am a man of common sense. I
+know how the whole affair seems to me, and I tell you frankly that I can
+see nothing from the point of view of honour to prevent Mannering
+marrying any woman he chooses. I think it very possible that he may
+readjust his whole point of view."</p>
+
+<p>The woman looked around her, and outside, where her victoria was waiting.
+At last she had attained to an environment such as she had all her life
+desired. The very idea that at any moment it might be swept away sent a
+cold shiver through her. Borrowdean had a trick of speaking convincingly.
+And besides&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Who is the woman?" she asked.</p>
+
+<p>"I had been wondering," Borrowdean said, "whether it would not be better
+to tell you, so that you might be on your guard. The woman is the Duchess
+of Lenchester."</p>
+
+<p>She stared at him.</p>
+
+<p>"You're in earnest?"</p>
+
+<p>"Absolutely!"</p>
+
+<p>Her face hardened. Whatever other feelings she may have had for
+Mannering, she had lived so long with the thought that he belonged to
+her, at least as a wage-earning animal, a person whose province it
+was to make her ways smooth so far as his means permitted, that the
+thought of losing him stirred in her a dull, jealous anger.</p>
+
+<p>"I'd stop it!" she declared. "I'd go and tell her everything."</p>
+
+<p>"I am not sure," Borrowdean continued, smoothly, "that that would be the
+best course. Supposing that you were to tell her the story just as you
+told it to me. It is just possible that her point of view might be mine.
+She might regard Lawrence Mannering as a quixotic person, and endeavour
+to persuade him that your claim was scarcely so binding as he seems to
+imagine. In any case, I do not think that your story would prevent her
+marrying him."</p>
+
+<p>"Then all I can say is that she is a woman with a very queer sense of
+right and wrong," Mrs. Phillimore declared, angrily.</p>
+
+<p>Borrowdean smiled.</p>
+
+<p>"A woman," he said, "who is fond of a man is apt to have her judgment
+a little warped. The Duchess is a woman of fine perceptions and sound
+judgment. But she is attracted by Lawrence Mannering. She admires him.
+He is the sort of person who appeals to her imagination. These feelings
+might easily become, if they have not already developed into, something
+else. And I tell you again that I do not believe your story would stop
+her from marrying him."</p>
+
+<p>She leaned a little towards him.</p>
+
+<p>"What would?" she asked, earnestly.</p>
+
+<p>He hesitated.</p>
+
+<p>"Well," he said, "I think I could tell you that!"</p>
+
+<p>She held up her hand.</p>
+
+<p>"Stop, please," she said. "I want to ask you something else. Are you
+Lawrence's enemy?"</p>
+
+<p>"I? Why, of course not!"</p>
+
+<p>"Then where do you come in?" she asked, bluntly. "You couldn't persuade
+me that it is interest on my account which brings you here and makes you
+tell me these things. You don't care a button for me."</p>
+
+<p>Borrowdean took her hand and leaned forward in his chair. She snatched it
+away.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, rot!" she exclaimed. "I may be a fool, but I'm not quite fool enough
+for that. I'm simply a useful person for the moment in some scheme of
+yours, and I just want to know what that scheme is. That's all! I'm not
+the sort of woman you'd waste a moment with, except for some purpose of
+your own. You've proved that. You wormed my story out of me very
+cleverly, but I haven't quite forgotten it yet, you know. And to tell you
+the truth," she continued, "you're not my sort, either. You and Lawrence
+Mannering are something of the same kidney after all, though he's worth
+a dozen of you. You've neither of you any time for play in the world, and
+that sort of man doesn't appeal to me. Now where do you come in?"</p>
+
+<p>Borrowdean looked at her thoughtfully. He had the air of a man a trifle
+piqued. Perhaps for the first time he realized that Blanche Phillimore
+was not altogether an unattractive-looking woman. If she had desired to
+stir him from his indifference she could not have chosen any more
+effectual means.</p>
+
+<p>"I am not going to argue with you," he said, quietly. "I have ambitions,
+it is true, and the world is not exactly a playground for me.
+Nevertheless, I am not an ascetic like Mannering. The world, the flesh
+and the devil are very much to me what they are to other men. But in a
+sense you have cornered me, and you shall have the truth. I want to marry
+the Duchess of Lenchester myself."</p>
+
+<p>She nodded.</p>
+
+<p>"That's right," she said. "Now we know where we are. You want to marry
+the Duchess, and therefore you don't want her to have Lawrence. You think
+that I can stop it, and as I don't want him married, either, you come to
+me. That is reasonable. Now how can I prevent it?"</p>
+
+<p>"By a slight variation from your story," he answered. "In fact, words are
+not needed. A suggestion only would be enough, and circumstances," he
+added, glancing around, "are strongly in favour of that suggestion."</p>
+
+<p>"You mean&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>He shrugged his shoulders.</p>
+
+<p>"Mannering is security for your lease," he remarked. "You pay in his
+cheques to your bank every quarter. He occupies just that position which
+in a general way is capable of one explanation only."</p>
+
+<p>"Well?"</p>
+
+<p>"Let the Duchess believe him, or continue to believe him, to be an
+ordinary man&mdash;instead of a fool&mdash;and she will never marry him."</p>
+
+<p>"And she will you?"</p>
+
+<p>"I hope so!"</p>
+
+<p>She leaned back in her chair. He could not altogether understand her
+silence. Surely she could have no scruples?</p>
+
+<p>"It seems to me," she said at last, "that I am to play your game for
+nothing. I don't care so very much, after all, if he marries. He'd settle
+all he could on me. In fact, I should have just as much claim on him as I
+have now."</p>
+
+<p>"I did not say that you should play it for nothing," he answered. "I want
+us to understand each other, because I have an idea that you may be
+seeing something of the Duchess at any moment. Let us put it this way.
+Suppose I promise to give you a diamond necklace of the value of, say
+five thousand pounds, the day I marry the Duchess!"</p>
+
+<p>She rose and put pen and paper before him. He shook his head.</p>
+
+<p>"I can't put an arrangement of that sort on paper," he protested. "You
+must rely upon my word of honour."</p>
+
+<p>She held out the pen to him.</p>
+
+<p>"On paper, or the whole thing is off absolutely," she declared.</p>
+
+<p>"You won't trust me?"</p>
+
+<p>She looked at him.</p>
+
+<p>"There isn't much honour about an arrangement of this sort, is there?"
+she said. "It has to be on paper, or not at all."</p>
+
+<p>A carriage stopped outside. They heard the bell.</p>
+
+<p>"That," she remarked, "may be the Duchess of Lenchester."</p>
+
+<p>He caught up the pen and wrote a few hurried lines. The smile with which
+he handed it to her was not altogether successful.</p>
+
+<p>"After all, you know," he said, "there should be honour amongst thieves."</p>
+
+<p>"No doubt there is," she answered. "Only thieves are a cut above us,
+aren't they?"</p>
+
+<p>"I don't believe," Borrowdean said to himself, as he reached the
+pavement, "that that woman is such a fool as she seems."</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_IIa" id="CHAPTER_IIa"></a>CHAPTER II</h2>
+
+<h3>"CHERCHEZ LA FEMME"</h3>
+
+
+<p>Mannering hated dinner parties, but this one had been a necessity.
+Nevertheless, if he had known who his companion for the evening was fated
+to be he would most certainly have stayed away. Her first question showed
+him that she had no intention of ignoring memories which to him were
+charged with the most subtle pain.</p>
+
+<p>He looked down the table, and back again into her face.</p>
+
+<p>"You are quite right," he said. "This is different. We cannot compare. We
+can judge only by effect&mdash;the effect upon ourselves."</p>
+
+<p>"Can you be analytical and yet remain within the orbit of my
+understanding?" she asked, with a faint smile. "If so, I should like to
+know exactly how you feel about it all."</p>
+
+<p>He passed a course with a somewhat weary gesture of refusal, and leaned
+back in his chair.</p>
+
+<p>"You are comprehensive&mdash;as usual," he remarked. "Just then I was
+wondering whether the perfume of these banks of hot-house flowers&mdash;I
+don't know what they are&mdash;was as sweet as the odour of the salt from
+the creeks, or my roses when the night wind touched them."</p>
+
+<p>"You were wondering! And what have you decided?"</p>
+
+<p>"Ah, I must not say. In any case you would not agree with me. Wasn't it
+you who once scoffed at my idyll in the wilderness?"</p>
+
+<p>"I do not think that I believe in idylls, nowadays," she answered. "One
+risks so many disappointments when one believes in anything."</p>
+
+<p>He raised his eyebrows.</p>
+
+<p>"You did not talk like this at Blakely," he remarked.</p>
+
+<p>"I am nearly a year older," she answered, "and a year wiser."</p>
+
+<p>"You pain me," he answered, with a little sigh. "You are a person of
+intelligence, and you talk of growing wiser with the years. Don't you
+know that the only supreme wisdom is the wisdom of the child? Our
+inherent ignorance is fed and nourished by experience."</p>
+
+<p>"You are hiding yourself," she remarked, "behind a fence of words&mdash;words
+that mean less than nothing! I don't suppose that even you would hesitate
+to admit that you have come into a larger world. You may have to pay for
+it. We all do. But at any rate it is an atmosphere which breeds men."</p>
+
+<p>"And changes women," he murmured, under his breath.</p>
+
+<p>She did not speak to him for several moments. Then the alteration in her
+tone and manner was almost marked.</p>
+
+<p>"You mentioned Blakely a few minutes ago," she said. "I wonder whether
+you remember our discussion there upon precisely what has come to pass."</p>
+
+<p>"Perfectly!"</p>
+
+<p>"I remember that in those days," she continued, reflectively, "you were
+very firm indeed, or was it my poor arguments that were at fault? Your
+vegetable and sentimental existence was a part of yourself. Ambition! You
+had forgotten what it was. Duty! You spouted individualism by the hour.
+Gratify my curiosity, won't you? Tell me what made you change your mind?"</p>
+
+<p>Mannering was silent for a moment. A close observer might have noticed
+a certain alteration in his face. A touch of the coming weariness was
+already there.</p>
+
+<p>"I have never changed my mind," he answered, quietly. "My inclinations
+to-day are what they have always been."</p>
+
+<p>She dropped her voice a little.</p>
+
+<p>"You puzzle me," she said, softly. "Do you mean that it was your sense of
+duty which was awakened?"</p>
+
+<p>"No, I do not mean that," he answered. "Forgive me&mdash;but I cannot tell you
+what I do mean. Circumstances brought me here against my will."</p>
+
+<p>"You talk like a slave," she said, lightly enough. She, too, was brave.
+She drank wine to keep the colour in her cheeks, and she told herself
+that the pain at her heart was nothing. Nevertheless, some words of
+Borrowdean's were mocking her all the while.</p>
+
+<p>"We are all slaves," he answered. "The folly of it all is when we stop to
+think. Then we realize it."</p>
+
+<p>Their conversation was like a strangled thing. Neither made any serious
+effort to re-establish it. It was a great dinner party, chiefly
+political, and long drawn out. Afterwards came a reception, and Mannering
+was at once surrounded. It was nearly midnight when by chance they came
+face to face again. She touched him with her fan, and leaned aside from
+the little group by whom she was surrounded.</p>
+
+<p>"Are you very much occupied, Mr. Mannering," she asked, lightly, "or
+could you spare me a moment?"</p>
+
+<p>He stopped short. Whatever surprise he may have felt he concealed.</p>
+
+<p>"I am entirely at your service, Duchess," he answered. "Mr. Harrison will
+excuse me, I am sure," he added, turning to his companion.</p>
+
+<p>She rested her fingers upon his arm. The house belonged to a relative of
+hers, and she knew where to find a quiet spot. When they were alone she
+did not hesitate for a moment.</p>
+
+<p>"Lawrence," she said, quietly, "will you imagine for a moment that we are
+back again at Blakely?"</p>
+
+<p>"I would to God we were!" he answered, impulsively. "That is&mdash;if you wish
+it too!"</p>
+
+<p>She did not answer at once. The sudden abnegation of his reserve took her
+by surprise. She had to readjust her words.</p>
+
+<p>"At least," she said, "there are many things about Blakely which I regret
+all the time. You know, of course, the chief one, our own altered selves.
+I know, Lawrence, that I need to ask your forgiveness. I came there under
+an assumed name, and I will admit that my coming was part of a scheme
+between Ronalds, Rochester and myself. Well, I am ready to ask your
+forgiveness for that. I don't think you ought to refuse it me. It doesn't
+alter anything that happened. It doesn't even affect it. You must believe
+that!"</p>
+
+<p>"I believe it, if you tell me so," he answered.</p>
+
+<p>"I do tell you," she declared. "I can explain it all. I am longing to
+have it all off my mind. But first of all, there is just one thing which
+I want to ask you."</p>
+
+<p>His face as he looked towards her gave her almost a shock. Very little
+was left of his healthy colouring. Already there were lines under his
+eyes, and he was certainly thinner. And there was something else which
+almost appalled her. There was fear in his manner. He sat like a man
+waiting for sentence, a man fore-doomed.</p>
+
+<p>"I want to know," she said, "what has brought you&mdash;here. I want to know
+what manner of persuasion has prevailed&mdash;when mine was so ineffectual.
+Don't think that I am not glad that you decided as you did. I am
+glad&mdash;very. You are in your rightful place, and I am only too thankful
+to hear about you, and read&mdash;and watch. But&mdash;we are jealous creatures, we
+women, you know, and I want to know whose and what arguments prevailed,
+when mine were so very insufficient."</p>
+
+<p>He answered her without hesitation, but his tone was dull and spiritless.</p>
+
+<p>"I cannot tell you!"</p>
+
+<p>There was a short silence. She gathered her skirts for a moment in her
+hand as though about to rise, but apparently changed her mind. She waited
+for some time, and then she spoke again.</p>
+
+<p>"Perhaps you think that I ought not to ask?"</p>
+
+<p>He looked at her hopelessly.</p>
+
+<p>"No, I don't think that. You have a right to ask. But it doesn't alter
+things, does it? I can't tell you."</p>
+
+<p>"You asked me to marry you."</p>
+
+<p>"It was at Blakely. We were so far out of the world&mdash;such a different
+world. I think that I had forgotten all that I wished to forget.
+Everything seemed possible there."</p>
+
+<p>"You mean that you would have married me and told me nothing of
+circumstances in your life, so momentous that they have practically
+exercised in this matter of your return to politics a compelling
+influence over you?"</p>
+
+<p>"I am sure," he said, "that I should not have told you!"</p>
+
+<p>His unhappiness moved her. She still lingered. She drew a little breath,
+and she went a good deal further than she had meant to go.</p>
+
+<p>"It has been suggested to me," she said, "that your reappearance was due
+to a woman's influence. Is this true?"</p>
+
+<p>"A woman had something to do with it," he admitted.</p>
+
+<p>"Who is she?"</p>
+
+<p>"Her name," he answered, "is Blanche Phillimore. It was the person to
+whom you yourself alluded."</p>
+
+<p>The Duchess maintained her self-control. She was quite pale, however, and
+her tone was growing ominously harder.</p>
+
+<p>"Is she a connection of yours?"</p>
+
+<p>"No!"</p>
+
+<p>"Is there anything which you could tell me about her?"</p>
+
+<p>"No!"</p>
+
+<p>"Yet at her bidding you have done&mdash;what you refused me."</p>
+
+<p>"I had no choice! Borrowdean saw to that," he remarked, bitterly.</p>
+
+<p>She rose to her feet. She was pale, and her lips were quivering, but she
+was splendidly handsome.</p>
+
+<p>"What sort of a man are you, Lawrence Mannering?" she asked, steadily.
+"You play at idealism, you asked me to marry you. Yet all the time there
+was this background."</p>
+
+<p>"It was madness," he admitted. "But remember it was Mrs. Handsell whom I
+asked to be my wife."</p>
+
+<p>"What difference does that make? She was a woman, too, I suppose, to be
+honoured&mdash;or insulted&mdash;by your choice!"</p>
+
+<p>"There was no question of insult, I think."</p>
+
+<p>She looked at him steadfastly. Perhaps for a moment her thoughts
+travelled back to those unforgotten days in the rose-gardens at Blakely,
+to the man whose delicate but wholesome joy in the wind and the sun and
+the flowers, the sea-stained marshes and the windy knolls where they had
+so often stood together, she could not forget. His life had seemed to her
+then so beautiful a thing. The elementary purity of his thoughts and
+aspirations were unmistakable. She told herself passionately that there
+must be a way out.</p>
+
+<p>"Lawrence," she said, "we are man and woman, not boy and girl. You asked
+me to marry you once, and I hesitated, only because of one thing. I do
+not wish to look into any hidden chambers of your life. I wish to know
+nothing, save of the present. What claim has this woman Blanche
+Phillimore upon you?"</p>
+
+<p>"It is her secret," he answered, "not mine alone."</p>
+
+<p>"She lives in your house&mdash;through her you are a poor man&mdash;through her you
+are back again, a worker in the world."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes!"</p>
+
+<p>"It must always be so?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes."</p>
+
+<p>"And you have nothing more to say?"</p>
+
+<p>"If I dared," he said, raising his eyes to hers, "I would say&mdash;trust me!
+I am not exactly&mdash;one of the beasts of the field."</p>
+
+<p>"Will you not trust me, then? I am not a foolish girl. I am a woman. You
+may destroy an ideal, but there would be something left."</p>
+
+<p>"I can tell you no more."</p>
+
+<p>"Then it is to be good-bye?"</p>
+
+<p>"If you say so!"</p>
+
+<p>She turned slowly away. He watched her disappear. Afterwards, with a
+curious sense of unreality, he remained quite still, his eyes still fixed
+upon the portiere through which she had passed.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_IIIa" id="CHAPTER_IIIa"></a>CHAPTER III</h2>
+
+<h3>ONE OF THE "SUFFERERS"</h3>
+
+
+<p>Mannering kept no carriage, and he left Downing Street on foot. The
+little house which he had taken furnished for the season was in the
+somewhat less pretentious neighborhood of Portland Crescent, and as there
+were no hansoms within hail he started to walk home. An attempt at a
+short cut landed him presently in a neighborhood which he failed to
+recognize. He paused, looking about him for some one from whom to inquire
+the way. Then he at once realized what he had already more than once
+suspected. He was being followed.</p>
+
+<p>The footsteps ceased as he himself had halted. It was a wet night, and
+the street was ill-lit. Nevertheless, Mannering could distinguish the
+figure of a man standing in the shadows of the houses, apparently to
+escape observation. For a moment he hesitated. His follower could
+scarcely be an ordinary hooligan, for not more than fifty yards away were
+the lights of a great thoroughfare, and even in this street, quiet though
+it was, there were people passing to and fro. His curiosity prompted him
+to subterfuge. He took a cigarette from his case, and commenced in a
+leisurely manner the operation of striking a light. Instantly the figure
+of the man began to move cautiously towards him.</p>
+
+<p>Mannering's eyes and hearing, keenly developed by his country life,
+apprised him of every step the man took. He heard him pause whilst a
+couple of women passed on the other side of the way. Afterwards his
+approach became swifter and more stealthy. Barely in time to avoid, he
+scarcely knew what, Mannering turned sharply round.</p>
+
+<p>"What do you want with me?" he demanded.</p>
+
+<p>The man showed no signs of confusion. Mannering, as he looked sternly
+into his face, lost all fear of personal assault. He was neatly but
+shabbily dressed, pale, and with a slight red moustache. He had a
+somewhat broad forehead, eyes with more than an ordinary lustre, and, in
+somewhat striking contradiction to the rest of his features, a large
+sensitive mouth with a distinctly humorous curve. Even now its corners
+were receding into a smile, which had in it, however, other elements than
+mirth alone.</p>
+
+<p>"You are Mr. Lawrence Mannering?"</p>
+
+<p>"That is my name," Mannering answered, "but if you want to speak to me
+why don't you come up like a man, instead of dogging my footsteps? It
+looked as though you wanted to take me by surprise. What is that you are
+hiding up your sleeve?"</p>
+
+<p>The man held it out, placed it even in Mannering's hand.</p>
+
+<p>"A life preserver, steel, as you see, and with a beautiful spring. Deadly
+weapon, isn't it, sir? Even a half-hearted sort of blow might kill a
+man."</p>
+
+<p>Mannering swung the weapon lightly in his hand. It cut the air with a
+soft, sickly swish.</p>
+
+<p>"What were you doing following me, on tiptoe, with this in your hand?" he
+asked, sternly.</p>
+
+<p>"Well," the man answered, as though forced to confess an unpleasant
+truth, "I am very much afraid that I was going to hit you with it."</p>
+
+<p>Mannering looked up and down the street for a policeman.</p>
+
+<p>"Indeed!" he said. "And may I ask why you changed your mind?"</p>
+
+<p>"It was an inspiration," the man answered, easily. "To tell you the
+truth, the clumsiness of the whole thing grated very much upon me.
+Personally, I ran no risk, don't think it was that. My escape was very
+carefully provided for. But one thinks quickly in moments of excitement,
+and it seemed to me as I took those last few steps that I saw a better
+way."</p>
+
+<p>"A better way," Mannering repeated, puzzled. "I am afraid I don't quite
+understand you. I presume that you meant to rob me. You would not have
+found it worth while, by the bye."</p>
+
+<p>The man laughed softly.</p>
+
+<p>"My dear sir," he exclaimed, "do I look like a robber? Rumour says that
+you are a poor man. I should think it very likely that, although I am not
+a rich one, I am at least as well off as you."</p>
+
+<p>Mannering looked out no more for the policeman. He was getting
+interested.</p>
+
+<p>"Come," he said, "I should like to understand what all this means. You
+were going to tap me on the head with this particularly unpleasant
+weapon, and your motive was not robbery. I am not aware of ever having
+seen you before. I am not aware of having an enemy in the world. Explain
+yourself."</p>
+
+<p>"I should be charmed," the man answered. "I do not wish to keep you
+standing here, however. Will you allow me to walk with you towards your
+home? You can retain possession of that little trifle, if you like," he
+added, pointing to the weapon which was still in Mannering's hand. "I can
+assure you that I have nothing else of the sort in my possession. You can
+feel my pockets, if you like."</p>
+
+<p>"I will take your word!" Mannering said. "I was on my way to Portland
+Crescent, but I fancy that I have taken a wrong turn."</p>
+
+<p>"We can get there this way," the man answered. "Excuse me one second."</p>
+
+<p>He paused, and lit a cigarette. Then with his hands behind his back he
+stepped out by Mannering's side.</p>
+
+<p>"What was that you said just now?" he remarked, "that you were not aware
+of having an enemy in the world? My dear sir, there was never a more
+extraordinary delusion. I should seriously doubt whether in the whole
+of the United Kingdom there is a man who has more. I know myself of a
+million or so who would welcome the news of your death to-morrow. I
+know of a select few who have opened, and will open their newspapers
+to-morrow, and for the next few days, in the hope of seeing your obituary
+notice."</p>
+
+<p>A light commenced to break in upon Mannering. He looked towards his
+companion incredulously.</p>
+
+<p>"You mean political opponents!" he exclaimed. "Is that what you are
+driving at all the time?"</p>
+
+<p>The man laughed softly.</p>
+
+<p>"My friend," he said&mdash;"excuse me, Mr. Mannering&mdash;you remind me
+irresistibly of <i>Punch's</i> cartoon last week&mdash;the ostrich politician with
+his head in the sand. You have thrust yours very deep down indeed, when
+you talk of political opponents. Do you know what they call you in the
+North, sir?"</p>
+
+<p>"No!"</p>
+
+<p>"The enemy of the people! It isn't a pleasant title, is it?"</p>
+
+<p>"It is a false one!" Mannering declared, with a little note of passion
+quivering in his tone.</p>
+
+<p>"It is as true and certain as the judgment of God!" his companion
+answered, with almost lightning-like rapidity.</p>
+
+<p>There was a moment's silence. They passed a lamp-post, and Mannering,
+turning his head, scrutinized the other's features closely.</p>
+
+<p>"I should like to know who you are," he said, "and what your name is."</p>
+
+<p>"It is a reasonable curiosity," the man answered. "My name is Fardell,
+Richard Fardell, and I am a retired bookmaker."</p>
+
+<p>"A bookmaker!" Mannering repeated, incredulously.</p>
+
+<p>"Precisely. I should imagine from what I know of you, Mr. Mannering, that
+my occupation, or rather my late occupation, is not one which would
+appeal to you favourably. Very likely not! I don't see why it should
+myself. But at any rate, it taught me a lot about my fellow men. I did my
+business in shillings and half-crowns, you see. Did it with the working
+classes, the sort who used to go to a race-meeting for a jaunt, and just
+have a bit on for the sake of the sport. Took their missus generally, and
+made a holiday of it, and if they lost they'd grin and come and chaff me,
+and if they won they'd spend the money like lords. I made money, of
+course, bought houses, and made a lot more. Then business fell off. I
+didn't seem to meet with that cheerful holiday-making crew at any of the
+meetings up in the North, and I got sick of it. You see, I'd made sort
+of friends with them. They all knew Dicky Fardell, and I knew hundreds
+of 'em by sight. They'd come and mob me to stand 'em a drink when the
+wrong horse won, and I can tell you I never refused. They were always
+good-tempered, real sports to the backbone, and I tell you I was fond of
+'em. And then they left off coming. I couldn't understand it at first.
+The one or two who came talked of bad trade, and when I asked after their
+pals they shook their heads. They betted in shillings instead of
+half-crowns, and I didn't like the look of their faces when they lost.
+I tell you, it got so at last that I used to watch for the horse they'd
+put their bit on to win, and feel kind o' sick when it didn't. You can
+imagine I couldn't stand that sort of thing long. I chucked it, and I
+went to look for my pals. I wanted to find out what had become of them."</p>
+
+<p>Mannering looked at him curiously.</p>
+
+<p>"You found, I hope," he said, drily, "that the British workman had
+discovered a better investment for his shillings and half-crowns than the
+race-course."</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Richard Fardell smiled pleasantly, but tolerantly.</p>
+
+<p>"It's clear," he said, "that you, meaning no offence, Mr. Mannering, know
+nothing about the British workman. Whatever else he may be, he's a
+sportsman. He'll look after his wife and kids as well as the best of
+them, but he'll have his bit of sport so long as he's got a copper in his
+pocket. When he didn't come I put my kit on one side and went to look for
+him. I went, mind you, as his friend, and knowing a bit about him. And
+what I found has made a changed man of me."</p>
+
+<p>Mannering nodded.</p>
+
+<p>"I am afraid things are bad up in the North," he said. "You mustn't think
+that we people who are responsible for the laws of the country ignore
+this, Mr. Fardell. It is a very anxious time indeed with all of us.
+Still, I presume you study the monthly trade returns. Some industries
+seem prosperous enough."</p>
+
+<p>"I'm no politician," Fardell answered, curtly. "Figures don't interest
+me. They're just the drugs some of your party use to keep your conscience
+quiet. Things I see and know of are what I go by. And what I've seen, and
+what I know of, are just about enough to tear the heart out of any man
+who cares a row of pins about his fellows. Now I'm going to talk plain
+English to you, Mr. Mannering. I bought that little article you have in
+your pocket seriously meaning to knock you on the head with it. And that
+may come yet."</p>
+
+<p>Mannering looked at him in amazement.</p>
+
+<p>"But my dear sir," he said, "what is your grievance against me? I have
+always considered myself a people's politician."</p>
+
+<p>"Then the people may very well say 'save me from my friends'," Fardell
+answered, grimly. "Mind, I believe you're honest, or you'd be lying on
+your back now with a cracked skull. But you are using a great influence
+on the wrong side. You're standing between the people and the one
+reasonable scheme which has been brought forward which has a fair chance
+of changing their condition."</p>
+
+<p>Then Mannering began to understand.</p>
+
+<p>"I oppose the scheme you speak of," he answered, "simply because I don't
+believe in it. Every man has a right to his opinion. I don't believe for
+a moment that it would improve the present condition of things."</p>
+
+<p>"Then what is your scheme?" Fardell asked.</p>
+
+<p>"My scheme!" Mannering repeated. "I don't quite understand you!"</p>
+
+<p>"Of course you don't," Fardell answered, vigourously. "You can weave
+academic arguments, you can make figures and statistics dance to any
+damned tune you please. If I tried to argue with you, you'd squash me
+flat. And what's it all come to? My pals must starve for the
+gratification of your intellectual vanity. You won't listen to Tariff
+Reform. Then what do you propose, to light the forges and fill the
+mills? Nothing! I say, unless you've got a counter scheme of your own,
+you ought to try ours."</p>
+
+<p>"Come, Mr. Fardell," Mannering said, "I can assure you that all I have
+said and written is the outcome of honest thought. I&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Stop!" Fardell exclaimed. "Honest thought! Yes! Where? In your study.
+That's where you theorists do your mischief. You can't make laws for the
+people in your study. You can't tell the status of the workingman from
+the figures you read in your study. You're like half the smug people in
+the world who discuss this question in the railway carriages and in their
+clubs. I've heard 'em till I'd like to shove their self-opinionated
+arguments down their throats, strip their clothes off their backs, and
+send them down to live with my pals, or starve with them. Any little
+idiot who buys a penny paper and who's doing pretty well for himself,
+thinks he can lay down the law about Free Trade. You're all of one
+kidney, sir! You none of you realize this. There are men as good as any
+of you, whose wives and children are as dear to them as yours to you,
+who've got to see them get thinner and thinner, who don't know where to
+get a day's work or lay their hands upon a copper, and all the while
+their kids come crying to them for something to eat. Put yourself in
+their place, sir, and try and realize the torture of it. I've been
+amongst 'em. I've spent half of what I made, and a good many thousands it
+was, buying food for them. Can you wonder that my fingers have itched for
+the throats of these smug, prosperous pigs, who spurt platitudes and
+think things are very well as they are because they're making their
+little bit? What right have you&mdash;any of you&mdash;to hesitate for a second to
+try any means to help those poor devils, unless you've got a better
+scheme of your own? Will you tell me that, sir?"</p>
+
+<p>They had reached Mannering's house, and he threw open the gate.</p>
+
+<p>"You must come in with me and talk about these things," Mannering said,
+gravely. "You seem to be the sort of person I've been wanting to meet for
+a long time."</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_IVa" id="CHAPTER_IVa"></a>CHAPTER IV</h2>
+
+<h3>DEBTS OF HONOUR</h3>
+
+
+<p>Berenice found the following morning a note from Borrowdean, which caused
+her some perplexity.</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>"If you really care," he said, "to do Mannering a good turn, look his
+niece up now and then. I am afraid that young woman has rather lost her
+head since she came to London, and she is making friends who will do her
+no particular good."</p></div>
+
+<p>Berenice ordered her carriage early, and drove round to Portland
+Crescent.</p>
+
+<p>"My dear child," she exclaimed, as Clara came into the room, "what have
+you been doing with yourself? You look ghastly!"</p>
+
+<p>Clara shrugged her shoulders, and looked at herself in a mirror.</p>
+
+<p>"I do look chippy, don't I?" she remarked. "I've been spending the
+week-end down at Bristow."</p>
+
+<p>"At Bristow?" Berenice repeated. Her voice spoke volumes. Clara looked up
+a little defiantly.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes! We had an awful spree! I like it there immensely, only&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>Berenice looked up.</p>
+
+<p>"I notice," she remarked, "that there is generally an 'only' about people
+who have spent week-ends at Bristow. They play cards there, don't they,
+until daylight? Some one once told me that they kept a professional
+croupier for roulette!"</p>
+
+<p>"That horrid game!" Clara exclaimed. "Please don't mention it. I've
+scarcely slept a wink all night for thinking of it."</p>
+
+<p>Berenice looked at her in surprise.</p>
+
+<p>"Do you mean to say," she inquired, deliberately, "that they allowed you
+to play&mdash;and lose?"</p>
+
+<p>"It wasn't their fault I lost," Clara answered. "Oh, what a fool I was.
+Bobby Bristow showed me a system. It seemed so easy. I didn't think I
+could possibly lose. It worked beautifully at first. I thought that I was
+going to pay all my bills, and have lots of money to spend. Then I
+doubled the stakes&mdash;I wanted to win a lot&mdash;and everything went wrong!"</p>
+
+<p>"How much did you lose?" Berenice asked. Clara shivered.</p>
+
+<p>"Don't ask me!" she cried. "Sir Leslie Borrowdean gave his own cheques
+for all my I.O.U.'s. He is coming to see me some time to-day. I don't
+know what I shall say to him."</p>
+
+<p>"Do you mean to go on playing?" Berenice asked, quietly, "or is this
+experience enough for you?"</p>
+
+<p>"I shall never sit at a roulette table again as long as I live," she
+declared. "I hate the very thought of it."</p>
+
+<p>"Then you can just ask Sir Leslie the amount of the I.O.U.'s, and tell
+him that he shall have a cheque in the morning," Berenice said. "I will
+lend you the money."</p>
+
+<p>Clara gave a little gasp.</p>
+
+<p>"You are too kind," she exclaimed, "but I don't know when I shall be able
+to repay you. It is&mdash;nearly three hundred pounds!"</p>
+
+<p>"So long as you keep your word," Berenice answered, "and do not play
+again, you need never let that trouble you. You shall have the cheque
+before two o'clock. No, please don't thank me. If you take my advice you
+won't spend another week-end at Bristow. It is not a fit house for young
+girls. How is your uncle?"</p>
+
+<p>"I haven't seen him this morning," Clara answered. "Perkins told me that
+he came home after midnight with a man whom he seemed to have picked up
+in the street, and they were in the study talking till nearly five this
+morning."</p>
+
+<p>Berenice rose.</p>
+
+<p>"I came to see if you would care to drive down to Ranelagh with me this
+morning," she said, "but you are evidently fit for nothing except to go
+back to bed again. I won't forget the cheque, and remember me to your
+uncle. By the bye, where's that nice young man who used to be always with
+you down in the country?"</p>
+
+<p>"You must mean Mr. Lindsay," Clara answered. "I have no idea. At Blakely,
+I suppose."</p>
+
+<p>"If I were you," Berenice said, as she rose, "I should write to him to
+come up and look after you. You need it!"</p>
+
+<p>She nodded pleasantly and took her leave. Clara threw herself into a
+chair and rang the bell.</p>
+
+<p>"Perkins," she said, "I have had no sleep and no breakfast. What should
+you recommend?"</p>
+
+<p>"An egg beaten up in milk, miss," the man suggested, "same as I've just
+taken Mr. Mannering."</p>
+
+<p>"Is my uncle up?" Clara asked.</p>
+
+<p>"Not yet, miss," the man answered; "He is just dressing."</p>
+
+<p>Clara nodded.</p>
+
+<p>"Very well. Please get me what you said, and if Sir Leslie Borrowdean
+calls I want to see him at once."</p>
+
+<p>"Sir Leslie is in the study now, miss," the man answered. "I showed him
+in there because I thought he would want to see Mr. Mannering, but he
+asked for you."</p>
+
+<p>"Will you say that I shall be there in three minutes," Clara said.</p>
+
+<p>The three minutes became rather a long quarter of an hour, but Clara had
+used the time well. When she entered the library she had changed her
+dress, rearranged her hair, and by some means or another had lost her
+unnatural pallor. Sir Leslie greeted her a little gravely,</p>
+
+<p>"Glad to see you looking so fit," he remarked. "They did us a bit too
+well down at Bristow, I thought. It's all very well for you children,"
+he continued, with a smile, "but when a man gets to my time of life he
+misses a night's rest."</p>
+
+<p>She smiled.</p>
+
+<p>"You don't call yourself old, Sir Leslie!" she remarked.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, I'm not young, although I like to think I am," he answered. "I'm
+afraid there's pretty nearly a generation between us, Miss Clara. By the
+bye, where's your uncle this morning?"</p>
+
+<p>"Getting up," she answered. "He did not go to bed until after five,
+Perkins tells me. He brought some one home with him from Dorchester's
+reception, or some one he picked up afterwards, and they seem to have sat
+up talking all night."</p>
+
+<p>Borrowdean was interested.</p>
+
+<p>"You have no idea who it was, I suppose?" he asked.</p>
+
+<p>She shook her head.</p>
+
+<p>"None at all. Perkins had never seen him before. When do you poor
+creatures get your holiday, Sir Leslie?"</p>
+
+<p>He smiled.</p>
+
+<p>"The session will be over in about three weeks," he answered, "unless we
+defeat the Government before then. Your uncle has been hitting them very
+hard lately. I think before long we shall be in office."</p>
+
+<p>"Politics," she said, "seems to be rather a greedy sort of business. You
+are always trying to turn the other side out, aren't you?"</p>
+
+<p>"You must remember," he answered, "that politics is rather a one-sided
+sort of affair. The party which is in makes a very comfortable living
+out of it, and we who are out have to scrape along as best we can. Rather
+hard upon people like your uncle and myself, who are, comparatively
+speaking, poor men. That reminds me," he said, bringing out his
+pocket-book, "I thought that I had better bring you these little
+documents."</p>
+
+<p>"Those horrid I.O.U.'s," she remarked.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," he answered. "I am sorry that you were so unlucky. I bought these
+from the bank, Miss Clara, as I thought you would not feel comfortable if
+you had to leave Bristow owing this money to strangers."</p>
+
+<p>"It was very thoughtful of you," she murmured. He changed his seat and
+came over to her side on the sofa.</p>
+
+<p>"Have you any idea how much they come to?" he asked, smoothing them out
+upon his knee.</p>
+
+<p>"I am afraid to nearly three hundred pounds," she answered.</p>
+
+<p>He shook his head gravely.</p>
+
+<p>"I am sorry to say that they come to a good deal more than that," he
+said. "I hope you do not forget that I took the liberty of advising you
+more than once to stop. You had the most abominable luck."</p>
+
+<p>"More than three hundred?" she gasped. "How much more?"</p>
+
+<p>"They seem to add up to five hundred and eighty five pounds," he
+declared. "I must confess that I was surprised myself."</p>
+
+<p>"There&mdash;I think there must be some mistake," Clara faltered.</p>
+
+<p>He handed them to her.</p>
+
+<p>"You had better look them through," he said. "They seem all right."</p>
+
+<p>She took them in her hand, and looked at them helplessly. There was one
+there for fifty pounds which she tried in vain to remember&mdash;and how shaky
+her handwriting was. A sudden flood of recollection brought the colour
+into her cheeks. She remembered the long table, the men all smoking, the
+women most of them a little hard, a little too much in earnest&mdash;the soft
+click of the ball, the silent, sickening moments of suspense. Others had
+won or lost as much as she, but perhaps because she had been so much in
+earnest, her ill-luck had attracted some attention. She remembered Major
+Bristow's whispered offer, or rather suggestion, of help. Even now her
+cheeks burned at something in his tone or look.</p>
+
+<p>"I suppose it's all right," she said, dolefully, "only it's a lot more
+than I thought. I shall have three hundred pounds in the morning, but
+I've no idea where to get the rest."</p>
+
+<p>"You are sure about the three hundred?" Sir Leslie asked, quietly.</p>
+
+<p>"Quite."</p>
+
+<p>"Then I think that you had better let me lend you the rest, for the
+present," he suggested. "I am afraid your uncle would be rather annoyed
+to know that you had been gambling to such an extent. You may be able to
+think of some way of paying me back later on."</p>
+
+<p>She looked up at him hesitatingly. There was nothing in his manner which
+suggested in the least what Major Bristow had almost pronounced. She drew
+a little breath of relief. He was so much older, and after all, he was
+her uncle's friend.</p>
+
+<p>"Can you really spare it, Sir Leslie?" she asked. "I can't tell you how
+grateful I should be."</p>
+
+<p>He looked down at her with a faint smile.</p>
+
+<p>"I can spare it for the present," he answered. "Only if you see any
+chance of paying me back before long, do so."</p>
+
+<p>"You will pardon my interference," said an ominously quiet voice from the
+doorway, "but may I inquire into the nature of this transaction between
+you and my niece, Sir Leslie? Perhaps you had better explain it, Clara!"</p>
+
+<p>They both turned quickly round. Mannering was standing upon the
+threshold, the morning paper in his hand. Clara sank into a chair and
+covered her face with her hands. Sir Leslie shrugged his shoulders.</p>
+
+<p>He was congratulating himself upon the discretion with which he had
+conducted the interview. He had for a few moments entertained other
+ideas.</p>
+
+<p>"Perhaps you will allow me to explain&mdash;" he began.</p>
+
+<p>"I should prefer to hear my niece," Mannering answered, coldly.</p>
+
+<p>Clara looked up. She was pale and frightened, and she had hard work to
+choke down the sobs.</p>
+
+<p>"Sir Leslie was down at Bristow, where I was staying&mdash;this last
+week-end," she explained. "I lost a good deal of money there at roulette.
+He very kindly took up my I.O.U.'s for me, and was offering when you came
+in to let it stand for a little time."</p>
+
+<p>"What is the amount?" Mannering asked.</p>
+
+<p>Clara did not answer. Her head sank again. Her uncle repeated his
+inquiry. There was no note of anger in his tone. He might have been
+speaking of an altogether indifferent matter.</p>
+
+<p>"I am afraid I shall have to trouble you to tell me the exact amount," he
+said. "Perhaps, Borrowdean, you would be so good as to inform me, as my
+niece seems a little overcome."</p>
+
+<p>"The amount of the I.O.U.'s for which I gave my cheque," Borrowdean said,
+"was five hundred and eighty-seven pounds. I have the papers here."</p>
+
+<p>There was a dead silence for a moment or two. Clara looked up furtively,
+but she could learn nothing from her uncle's face. It was some time
+before he spoke. When at last he did, his voice was certainly a little
+lower and less distinct than usual.</p>
+
+<p>"Did I understand you to say&mdash;five hundred and eighty-seven pounds?"</p>
+
+<p>"That is the amount," Borrowdean admitted. "I trust that you do not
+consider my interference in any way officious, Mannering. I thought it
+best to settle the claims of perfect strangers against Miss Mannering."</p>
+
+<p>"May I ask," Mannering continued, "in whose house my niece was permitted
+to lose this sum?"</p>
+
+<p>"It was at the Bristows'," Clara answered.</p>
+
+<p>"And under whose chaperonage were you?" Mannering asked.</p>
+
+<p>"Lady Bristow's! She called for me here, and took me down last Friday."</p>
+
+<p>"Are these people who are generally accounted respectable?" Mannering
+asked.</p>
+
+<p>"I don't think that Bristow is much better or worse than half of our
+country houses," Borrowdean answered. "People who are at all in the swim
+must have excitement nowadays, you know. Bristow himself isn't very
+popular, but people go to the house."</p>
+
+<p>Mannering made no further remark.</p>
+
+<p>"If you will come into the study, Borrowdean," he said, "I will settle
+this matter with you."</p>
+
+<p>Borrowdean hesitated.</p>
+
+<p>"Your niece said something about having three hundred pounds," he
+remarked.</p>
+
+<p>Mannering glanced towards her.</p>
+
+<p>"I think," he said, "that that must be a mistake. My niece has no such
+sum at her command."</p>
+
+<p>Clara rose to her feet.</p>
+
+<p>"You may as well know everything," she said. "The Duchess of Lenchester
+came in and found me very unhappy this morning. I told her everything,
+and she offered to lend me the money. I told her then that it was only
+three hundred pounds. I thought that was all I owed."</p>
+
+<p>"Have you made any other confidants?" Mannering asked.</p>
+
+<p>"No!"</p>
+
+<p>"You will return the Duchess's cheque," Mannering said. "Borrowdean, will
+you come this way?"</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_Va" id="CHAPTER_Va"></a>CHAPTER V</h2>
+
+<h3>LOVE <i>versus</i> POLITICS</h3>
+
+
+<p>Berenice was a little annoyed. It was the hour before dressing for dinner
+which she always devoted to repose&mdash;the hour saved from the stress of the
+day which had helped towards keeping her the young woman she certainly
+was. Yet Borrowdean's message was too urgent to ignore. She suffered her
+maid to wrap some sort of loose gown about her, and received him in her
+own study.</p>
+
+<p>"My dear Sir Leslie," she said, a little reproachfully, "was this really
+necessary? You know that after half-past six I am practically a person
+not existing&mdash;until dinner time!"</p>
+
+<p>"I should not have ventured to intrude upon you," Borrowdean said,
+quickly, "if the circumstances had not been altogether exceptional.
+I know your habits too well. I have just come from Mannering."</p>
+
+<p>"From Mannering&mdash;yes!"</p>
+
+<p>"Duchess," Borrowdean said, "have you&mdash;forgive a blunt question&mdash;but have
+you any influence over him?"</p>
+
+<p>Berenice was silent for several moments.</p>
+
+<p>"You ask me rather a hard question," she said. "A few months ago I think
+that I should have said yes. To-day&mdash;I am not sure. What has happened?
+Is anything wrong with him?"</p>
+
+<p>"Nothing, except that he seems to have gone mad," Borrowdean said,
+bitterly. "I went to him to-day to get him to fix the dates for his
+meetings at Glasgow and Leeds. What do you think his answer was?"</p>
+
+<p>"Don't tell me that he wants to back out!" Berenice exclaimed. "Don't
+tell me that!"</p>
+
+<p>"Almost as bad! He told me quite coolly that he was not prepared finally
+to set out his views upon the question until he had completed a course of
+personal investigation in some of the Northern centres of trade, to which
+he had committed himself."</p>
+
+<p>Berenice looked bewildered.</p>
+
+<p>"But what on earth does he mean?" she exclaimed. "Surely he knows all
+that there is to be known. His mastery of statistics is something
+wonderful."</p>
+
+<p>"What he means no man save himself can even surmise," Borrowdean
+answered. "He told me that he had had information of a state of distress
+in some of our Northern towns&mdash;Newcastle and Hull he mentioned, and some
+of the Lancashire places&mdash;which had simply appalled him. He was
+determined to verify it personally, and to commit himself to nothing
+further until he had done so. And he even asked me if I could not find
+him a pair until the end of the session, so that he could get away at
+once. I was simply dumbfounded. A pair for Mannering!"</p>
+
+<p>Berenice rose to her feet. She walked up and down the little room
+restlessly.</p>
+
+<p>"Sir Leslie," she said at last, "I am not sure whether I have what you
+would call any influence over Mr. Mannering now or not. I might have had
+but for you!"</p>
+
+<p>"For me?" Borrowdean exclaimed.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes. It was you who told me of&mdash;of&mdash;that woman," she said, haughtily,
+but with the colour rising almost to her temples. "After that, of course
+things were different between us. We are scarcely upon such terms at
+present as would justify my interference."</p>
+
+<p>Borrowdean dropped his eyeglass, and swung it deliberately by its black
+ribbon. He looked steadily at Berenice, but his eyes seemed to travel
+past her.</p>
+
+<p>"My dear Duchess," he said, quietly, "the game of life is a great one to
+play, and we who would keep our hands upon the board must of necessity
+make sacrifices. It is your duty to disregard in this instance your
+feelings towards Mannering. You must consider only his feelings towards
+you. They are such, I believe, as to give you a hold over him. You must
+make use of that hold for the sake of a great cause."</p>
+
+<p>Berenice raised her eyebrows.</p>
+
+<p>"Indeed! You seem to forget, Sir Leslie, that my share in this game, as
+you call it, must always be a passive one. I have no office to gain, no
+rewards to reap. Why should I commit myself to an unpleasant task for the
+sake of you and your friends?"</p>
+
+<p>"It is your party," he protested. "Your party as much as ours."</p>
+
+<p>"Granted," she answered. "Yet who are the responsible members of it? You
+know my opinion of Mannering as a politician. I would sooner follow him
+blindfold than all the others with my eyes open. Whatever he may lack, he
+is the most honest and right-seeing politician who ever entered the
+House."</p>
+
+<p>"He lacks but one thing," Borrowdean said, "the mechanical adjustment
+of the born politician to party matters. There was never a time when
+absolute unity and absolute force were so necessary. If he is going to
+play the intelligent inquirer, if he falters for one moment in his
+wholesale condemnation of this scheme, he loses the day for himself and
+for us. The one thing which the political public never forgives is
+the man who stops to think."</p>
+
+<p>"What do you want me to do?" Berenice asked.</p>
+
+<p>"To go to him and find out what he means, what influences have been at
+work, what is underneath it all. Warn him of the danger of even appearing
+doubtful, or for a moment lukewarm. The one person whom the public will
+not have in politics is the trifler. Think how many there have been,
+brilliant men, too, who have lost their places through a single false
+step, a single year, a month of dilettantism. Remind him of them. The man
+who moves in a great cause may move slowly, if you will, but he must move
+all the time. Remind him, too, that he is risking the one great chance of
+his life!"</p>
+
+<p>"He is to be Premier, then?" she asked.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes! There is no alternative!"</p>
+
+<p>"Very well, then," she said, "I will go. I make no promises, mind. I will
+listen to what he has to say. I will put our view of the situation before
+him. But I make no promises. It is possible, even, that I shall come to
+his point of view, whatever it may be."</p>
+
+<p>Borrowdean smiled.</p>
+
+<p>"I have no fear of that," he declared, "but at least it would be
+something to know what this point of view is. You will find him in a
+queer mood. That little fool of a niece of his has been getting in with
+a fast set, and making the money fly. You have heard of her last escapade
+at Bristow?"</p>
+
+<p>Berenice nodded.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," she said. "I went there this morning directly I had your note.
+I feel rather self-reproachful about Clara Mannering. I meant to have
+looked after her more. She is rather an uninteresting young woman,
+though, and I am afraid I have let her drift away."</p>
+
+<p>"She will be all right with a little looking after," Borrowdean said.
+"Forgive me, but it is getting late."</p>
+
+<p>"I will go at once," she said.</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>Afterwards she wondered often at that strange, uncertain fluttering of
+the heart, the rush and glow of feelings warmer than any which had lately
+stirred her, which seemed in those first few minutes of their being
+together, to make an altered woman of her. Mannering, as he entered the
+room, pale and listless, was conscious at once of a foreign element in
+it, something which stirred his somewhat slow-beating pulse, too, which
+seemed to bring back to him a flood of delicious memories, the perfume of
+his rose-gardens at evening, the soft night music of his wind-stirred
+cedars. She had thrown aside her opera cloak. The delicate lines of her
+bust seemed to have expanded with the unusual rise and fall of her bosom.
+A faint rose-tint flush of streaming colour had stained the ivory
+whiteness of her skin&mdash;her eyes as they sought his were soft, almost
+liquid. They met so seldom alone&mdash;and she was alone now with him in the
+room which was so characteristically his own, a room with many
+indications of his constant presence, which one by one she had been
+realizing with curiously quickened pulses during the few minutes of
+waiting. On her way here, driving in an open victoria, through the soft
+summer evening, she had seemed to be pursued everywhere by a new world of
+sensuous suggestions. Of the many carriages which she had passed, hers
+alone seemed to savour of loneliness. She was the only beautiful woman
+who sat alone and companionless. In a momentary block she had seen a man
+in a neighbouring hansom slip his hand, a strong, brown, well-looking
+hand, under the apron, to hold for a moment the fingers of the woman who
+sat by his side&mdash;Berenice had caught the answering smile, she had seen
+him lean forward and whisper something which had brought a deeper flush
+into her own cheeks and a look into her eyes, half amused, half tender.
+These were rare moments with her, these moments of sentiment&mdash;perhaps for
+that reason all the more dangerous. She forgot almost the cause of her
+coming. She remembered only that she was alone with the one man whose
+voice had the power to thrill her, whose touch would call up into life
+the great hidden forces of her own passionate nature. The memory of all
+other things passed away from her like a cloud gone from the face of the
+sun. She leaned towards him. His face was full of wonder&mdash;wonder, and the
+coming joy.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<a href="images/ill5_th.jpg"><img src="images/ill5_th.jpg" alt=""/></a>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>"Berenice!" he exclaimed.</p>
+
+<p>She let herself drift down the surging tide of this suddenly awakened
+passion. She held out her arms and pressed her lips on his as he caught
+her.</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>Presently she pushed him gently away&mdash;held him there at arm's length.</p>
+
+<p>"This is too absurd," she murmured, and drew him once more towards her
+with a choking little laugh. "I came for something quite different!"</p>
+
+<p>"What does it matter what you came for, so long as you stay," he
+answered. "Say that you came to bring a glimpse of paradise to a lonely
+man!"</p>
+
+<p>She disengaged herself, and her long white fingers strayed mechanically
+to her tumbled hair. The elegant precision of her toilette had given
+place to a most distracting disarray. She felt her cheeks burning still,
+and the lace at her bosom was all crushed.</p>
+
+<p>"And I was on my way to a dinner party," she whispered, with humorously
+uplifted eyebrows. "I must drive back home, and&mdash;and&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"And what?" he demanded.</p>
+
+<p>"And send an excuse," she declared, demurely. "I am not equal to a family
+dinner party."</p>
+
+<p>"And afterwards?"</p>
+
+<p>She smiled.</p>
+
+<p>"Would you like," she asked, "to take me out to dinner?"</p>
+
+<p>"Would I like!"</p>
+
+<p>"Go and change, and call for me in half an hour. We can go somewhere
+where we are not likely to be seen," she said, softly. "I must cover
+myself up in my cloak. Whatever will Perkins say? Please remember that
+I have no hat."</p>
+
+<p>He held her hands and looked into her eyes.</p>
+
+<p>"Don't go for one moment," he pleaded. "I want to realize it. I want to
+feel sure of you."</p>
+
+<p>The gravity of his manner was for a moment reflected in her tone.</p>
+
+<p>"I think," she said, "that you may feel sure. There are things which we
+may have to say to one another&mdash;presently&mdash;but&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>He stooped and kissed her fingers.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_VIa" id="CHAPTER_VIa"></a>CHAPTER VI</h2>
+
+<h3>THE CONSCIENCE OF A STATESMAN</h3>
+
+
+<p>He was shown into her own little boudoir by a smiling maid-servant, who
+seemed already to treat him with an especial consideration. The wonder of
+this thing was still lying like a thrall upon him, and yet he knew that
+the joy of life was burning once more in his veins. He caught sight of
+himself in a mirror, and he was amazed. The careworn look had gone from
+his eyes, the sallowness from his complexion. His step was elastic, he
+felt the firm, quick beat of his heart, even his pulses seem to throb to
+a new and a wonderful tune. These moments whilst he waited for her were a
+joy to him. The atmosphere was fragrant with the perfume of her favourite
+roses, a book lay upon the little inlaid table face downwards as she had
+left it. There was a delicately engraved etching upon the wall, which he
+recognized as her work; the watercolours, all of a French school which he
+had often praised, were of her choosing. Perfect though the room was in
+colouring and detail, there was yet a habitable, almost a homely, air
+about it. Mannering moved about amidst her treasures like a man in a
+dream, only it was a dream of loneliness gone forever, of a grey life
+suddenly coloured and transformed. It was wonderful.</p>
+
+<p>Then the soft swish of a skirt, and she came in. She had changed her
+gown. She wore white lace, with a string of pearls about her neck. He
+looked eagerly into her face, and a great relief took the place of that
+single instant of haunting fear. The change was still there. It was not
+the great lady who swept in, but the woman who has found an answer to
+the one question of life, a little tremulous still, a little less
+self-assured. She looked at him almost appealingly. A delicate tinge of
+colour lingered in her cheeks. He moved quickly forward to meet her.</p>
+
+<p>"Dear!" she murmured.</p>
+
+<p>He raised her hand to his lips. He was satisfied.</p>
+
+<p>"You see what my new-born vanity has led to," she declared, smilingly. "I
+have had to keep you waiting whilst I changed my gown. I hope you like me
+in white."</p>
+
+<p>"You are adorable," he declared.</p>
+
+<p>She laughed.</p>
+
+<p>"I wonder," she said, "would you mind dining here alone with me? It will
+be quite a scratch meal, but I thought that it would be cosier than a
+restaurant, and afterwards&mdash;we could come in here and talk."</p>
+
+<p>"I should like it better than anything in the world," he declared,
+truthfully.</p>
+
+<p>"You may take me in, then," she said. "I hope that you are as hungry as
+I am. No, not that way. I have ordered dinner to be served in the little
+room where I dine when I am alone."</p>
+
+<p>To Mannering there seemed something almost unreal about the chaste
+perfection of the meal and its wonderful service. They dined at a small
+round table, so small that more than once their fingers touched upon the
+tablecloth. A single servant waited upon them, swiftly and perfectly. The
+butler appeared only with the wine, which he served, and quietly
+withdrew. Across the tangled mass of flowers, only a few feet away all
+the time, sat the woman who had suddenly made the world so beautiful to
+him. A murmur of conversation continually flowed between them, but he was
+never very sure what they were talking about. He wanted to sit still, to
+feast his eyes, all his senses, upon her, to strive to realize this new
+thing, that from henceforth she was his! And then suddenly she broke the
+spell. She leaned back in her chair and laughed softly.</p>
+
+<p>"I have just remembered," she said, in response to his inquiring look,
+"why I came to call upon you this evening. What a long time ago it
+seems."</p>
+
+<p>He smiled.</p>
+
+<p>"And I never thought to ask you," he remarked.</p>
+
+<p>"We must have no secrets now," she said, with a delightful smile. "Leslie
+Borrowdean came to see me this afternoon, and he was very anxious about
+you. He declared that you wanted to postpone your great meetings in the
+North until after you had made some independent investigations in some of
+the manufacturing centres. Poor Sir Leslie! You had frightened him so
+completely that he was scarcely coherent."</p>
+
+<p>Mannering smiled a little gravely. It was like coming back to earth.</p>
+
+<p>"Politics with Borrowdean are so much a matter of pounds, shillings and
+pence that the bare idea of his finding himself a day further away from
+office frightens him to death," he said. "We are all like the pawns, to
+be moved about the chessboard of his life."</p>
+
+<p>Berenice smiled.</p>
+
+<p>"He is certainly a very self-centred person," she remarked; "but do
+you know, I am really a little curious to know how you succeeded in
+frightening him so thoroughly."</p>
+
+<p>"I had a fright myself," Mannering said. "I was made to feel for an hour
+or so like a Rip van Winkle with the cobwebs hanging about me&mdash;Rip van
+Winkle looking out upon a new world!"</p>
+
+<p>"You a Rip van Winkle!" she laughed. "What was it that man who wrote in
+the <i>Nineteenth Century</i> called you last week? 'The most precise and
+far-seeing of our politicians.'"</p>
+
+<p>"The men who write in reviews," he murmured, "sometimes display the most
+appalling ignorance. There was also some one in the <i>Saturday Review</i> who
+alluded to me last week as a library politician. My friend quoted that
+against me. 'A man who essays to govern a people he knows nothing of.' It
+was one of the labour party who wrote it, I know, but it sticks."</p>
+
+<p>"You are not losing confidence in yourself, surely?" she remarked,
+smiling.</p>
+
+<p>"My views are unchanged, if that is what you mean," he answered. "I
+believe I know what is good for the people, and when I am sure of it I
+shall not be afraid to take up the gauntlet. But I must be quite sure."</p>
+
+<p>"You puzzle me a little," she admitted. "Has any one written more
+convincingly than you? Arguments which are founded upon logic and
+statistics must yield truth, and you have set it down in black and
+white."</p>
+
+<p>"On the other hand," he said, "my unlearned but eloquent friend dismissed
+all statistics, all the science of argument and deduction, with the wave
+of a not too scrupulously clean hand. 'Figures,' he said, 'are dead
+things. They are the playthings of the charlatan politician, who, by a
+sort of mental sleight of hand, can make them perform the most wonderful
+antics. If you desire the truth, seek it from live things. If you desire
+really to call yourself the champion of the people, come and see for
+yourself how they are faring. Figures will not feed them, nor statistics
+keep them from the great despair. Come and let me show you the sinews of
+the country, whether they are sound or rotten. You cannot see them
+through your library walls. It is only the echo of their voice which you
+hear so far off. If you would really be the people's man, come and learn
+something of the people from their own lips.' This is what my friend said
+to me."</p>
+
+<p>"And who," she asked, "was this prophet who came to you and talked like
+this?"</p>
+
+<p>"A retired bookmaker," he answered. "I will tell you of our meeting."</p>
+
+<p>She listened gravely. After he had finished there was a short silence.
+The dessert was on the table, and they were alone. Berenice was looking
+thoughtful.</p>
+
+<p>"Tell me," he begged, "exactly what that wrinkled forehead means?"</p>
+
+<p>"I was wondering," she said, "whether Sir Leslie was right, when he said
+that you had too much conscience ever to be a great politician."</p>
+
+<p>"It mirrors Borrowdean's outlook upon politics precisely," he remarked.</p>
+
+<p>She smiled at him with a sudden radiance. She had risen to her feet, and
+with a quick, graceful movement leaned over him. This new womanliness
+which he had found so irresistible was alight once more in her face. Her
+eyes sought his fondly, she touched his lips with hers. The perfume of
+her clothes, the touch of her hair upon his cheek, were like a drug. He
+had no more words.</p>
+
+<p>"You may have one peach and one glass of the Prince's Burgundy, and then
+you must come and look for me," she said. "We have wasted too much time
+talking of other things. You haven't even told me yet what I have a right
+to hear, you know. I want to be told that you care for me better than
+anything else in the world."</p>
+
+<p>He caught her hands. There was a rare passion vibrating in his tone.</p>
+
+<p>"You do not doubt it, Berenice?"</p>
+
+<p>"Perhaps not," she answered, "but I want to be told. I am a middle-aged
+woman, you know, Lawrence, but I want to be made love to as though I were
+a silly girl! Isn't that foolish? But you must do it," she whispered,
+with her lips very close to his.</p>
+
+<p>He drew her into his arms.</p>
+
+<p>"I am not at all sure," he said, "that I have enough courage to make love
+to a Duchess!"</p>
+
+<p>"Then you can remember only that I am a woman," she whispered, "very,
+very, very much a woman, and&mdash;I'm afraid&mdash;a woman shockingly in love!"</p>
+
+<p>She disengaged herself suddenly, and was at the door before he could
+reach it. She looked back. Her cheeks were flushed. There was even a
+faint tinge of pink underneath the creamy white of her slender, stately
+neck.</p>
+
+<p>"Don't dare," she said, "to be more than five minutes!"</p>
+
+<p>Mannering poured himself out a glass of wine, and sat quite still with
+his head between his hands. He wanted to realize this thing if he could.
+The grinding of the great wheels fell no more upon his ears. He looked
+into a new world, so different from the old that he was almost afraid.</p>
+
+<p>And in her room, Berenice waited for him impatiently.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_VIIa" id="CHAPTER_VIIa"></a>CHAPTER VII</h2>
+
+<h3>A BLOW FOR BORROWDEAN</h3>
+
+
+<p>There was a somewhat unusual alertness in Borrowdean's manner as he
+passed out from the little house in Sloane Gardens and summoned a passing
+hansom. He drove to the corner of Hyde Park, and dismissing the cab
+strolled along the broad walk.</p>
+
+<p>The many acquaintances whom he passed and repassed he greeted with a
+certain amount of abstraction. All the time he kept his eyes upon the
+road. He was waiting to catch sight of some familiar liveries. When at
+last they came he contrived to stop the carriage and hastily threaded his
+way to the side of the barouche.</p>
+
+<p>Berenice was looking radiantly beautiful. The exquisite simplicity of her
+white muslin gown and large hat of black feathers, the slight flush with
+which she received him, as though she carried about with her a secret
+which she expected every one to read, the extinction of that air of
+listlessness which had robbed her for some time of a certain share of her
+good looks&mdash;of all these things Borrowdean made quick note. His face grew
+graver as he accepted her not very enthusiastic invitation and occupied
+the back seat of the carriage. For the first time he admitted to himself
+the possibility of failure in his carefully laid plans. He recognized the
+fact, that there were forces at work against which he had no weapon
+ready. He had believed that Berenice was attracted by Mannering's
+personality and genius. He had never seriously considered the question of
+her feelings becoming more deeply involved. So many men had paid vain
+court to her. She had a wonderful reputation for inaccessibility. And yet
+he remembered her manner when he had paid his first unexpected visit to
+Blakely. It should have been a lesson to him. How far had the mischief
+gone, he wondered!</p>
+
+<p>"So Mannering has gone North," he remarked, noticing that she avoided the
+subject.</p>
+
+<p>She nodded. Her parasol drooped a little his way, and he wondered whether
+it was because she desired her face hidden.</p>
+
+<p>"You saw him?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," she answered. "He explained how he felt to me."</p>
+
+<p>"And you could not dissuade him?"</p>
+
+<p>"I did not try," she answered, simply. "Lawrence Mannering is not a man
+of ordinary disposition, you know. He had come to the conclusion that it
+was right for him to go, and opposition would only have made him the more
+determined. I cannot see that there is any harm likely to come of it."</p>
+
+<p>"I am not so sure of that," Borrowdean answered, seriously. "Mannering is
+<i>au fond</i> a man of sentiment. There is no clearer thinker or speaker when
+his judgment is unbiassed, but on the other hand, the man's nature is
+sensitive and complex. He has a sort of maudlin self-consciousness which
+is as dangerous a thing as the nonconformist conscience. Heaven knows
+into whose hands he may fall up there."</p>
+
+<p>"He is going incognito," she remarked.</p>
+
+<p>"He is not the sort of man to escape notice," Borrowdean answered. "He
+will be discovered for certain. Of course, if it comes off all right, the
+whole thing will be a feather in his cap. But when I think how much we
+are dependent upon him, I don't like the risk."</p>
+
+<p>"You are sure," she remarked, thoughtfully, "that you do not over-rate&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Mannering himself, perhaps," Borrowdean interrupted. "There is no man
+whose personal place cannot be filled. But one thing is very certain.
+Mannering is the only man who unites both sides of our scattered party,
+the only man under whom Fergusson and Johns would both serve. You know
+quite well the curse which has rested upon us. We have become a party of
+units, and our whole effectiveness is destroyed. We want welding into one
+entity. A single session, a single year of office, and the thing would be
+done. We who do the mechanical work would see that there was no breaking
+away again. But we must have that year, we must have Mannering. That is
+why I watch him like a child, and I must say that he has given me a good
+deal of anxiety lately."</p>
+
+<p>"In what way?" she asked.</p>
+
+<p>Borrowdean hesitated. He seemed uncertain how to answer.</p>
+
+<p>"If I explain what I mean," he said, "you will understand that I do not
+speak to you as a woman and an acquaintance of Mannering's, but simply as
+one of ourselves. Mannering's private life is, of course, interesting to
+me only as an index to his political destiny, and my acquaintance with it
+arises solely from my political interest in him. There are things in
+connection with it which I feel that I shall never properly be able to
+understand."</p>
+
+<p>She looked at him steadily. Her cheeks were a little whiter, but her tone
+was deliberate.</p>
+
+<p>"I do not wish to hear anything about Mr. Mannering's private life," she
+said. "You will understand that I am not free or disposed to listen when
+I tell you that I am going to marry him."</p>
+
+<p>This was perhaps the worst blow Borrowdean had ever experienced in the
+course of his whole life. The possibility of this was a danger which he
+had recognized might some time have to be reckoned with, but for the
+present he had felt safe enough. He was taken so completely aback that
+for a few moments his mind was a blank. He remained silent.</p>
+
+<p>"You do not offer me the conventional wishes," she remarked, presently.</p>
+
+<p>"They go&mdash;from me to you&mdash;as a matter of course," he answered. "To tell
+you the truth, I never thought of Mannering, for many reasons, as a
+marrying man."</p>
+
+<p>"You will have to readjust your views of him," she said, quietly, "for
+I think that we shall be married very soon."</p>
+
+<p>Borrowdean was a little white, and his teeth had come together. Whatever
+happened, he told himself, fiercely, this must never be. He felt his
+breast-pocket mechanically. Yes, the letter was there. Dare he risk it?
+She was a proud woman, she would be unforgiving if once she believed. But
+supposing she found him out? He temporized.</p>
+
+<p>"Thank you for telling me," he said. "Do you mind putting me down here?"</p>
+
+<p>"Why? You seemed in no hurry a few minutes ago."</p>
+
+<p>"The world," he said, "was a different place then."</p>
+
+<p>She looked at him searchingly.</p>
+
+<p>"You had better tell me all about it," she remarked. "You have something
+on your mind, something which you are half disposed to tell me, a little
+more than half, I think. Go on."</p>
+
+<p>He looked at her as one might look at the magician who has achieved the
+apparently impossible.</p>
+
+<p>"You are wonderful," he said. "Yes, I will tell you my dilemma, if you
+like. I have just come from Sloane Gardens!"</p>
+
+<p>Her face changed instantly. It was as though a mask had been dropped over
+it. Her eyes were fixed, her features expressionless.</p>
+
+<p>"Well?" she said, simply.</p>
+
+<p>He drew a letter from his pocket.</p>
+
+<p>"You may as well see it yourself," he remarked. "For reasons which you
+may doubtless understand, I have always kept on good terms with Mrs.
+Phillimore, and she was to have dined with me and some other friends
+to-morrow night. Here is a note which I had from her yesterday. Will you
+read it?"</p>
+
+<p>Berenice held it between her finger tips. There were only a few lines,
+and she read them at a glance.</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>
+<span class="smcap">Sloane Gardens</span>,<br />
+<i>Tuesday</i>.
+</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">My dear Sir Leslie</span>,</p>
+
+<p>I am so sorry, but I must scratch for to-morrow night. L. is going North
+on some mysterious expedition, and I am afraid that he will want me to go
+with him. In fact, he has already said so. Ask me again some time, won't
+you?</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Yours ever,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0"><span class="smcap">Blanche Phillimore</span>.<br /></span>
+</div></div></div>
+
+<p>Berenice folded up the letter and returned it.</p>
+
+<p>"It is a little extraordinary," she remarked. "I am much obliged to you
+for showing me this. If you do not mind, we will talk of something else.
+Look, there is Clara Mannering alone under the trees. Go and talk to
+her."</p>
+
+<p>Berenice touched the checkstring, and Borrowdean was forced to depart.
+She smiled upon him graciously enough, but she spoke not another word
+about Mannering. Borrowdean was obliged to leave her without knowing
+whether he had lost or gained the trick.</p>
+
+<p>Clara Mannering received him not altogether graciously. As a matter of
+fact, she was looking for some one else. They strolled along, talking
+almost in monosyllables. Borrowdean found time to notice the change which
+even these few months in London had wrought in her. She was still
+graceful in her movements, but a smart dressmaker had contrived to make
+her a perfect reproduction of the recognized type of the moment. She had
+lost her delicate colouring. There was a certain hardness in her young
+face, a certain pallor and listlessness in her movements which Borrowdean
+did not fail to note. He tried to lead the conversation into more
+personal channels.</p>
+
+<p>"We seem to have met very little during the last month," he said. "I have
+scarcely had an opportunity to ask you whether you find the life here as
+pleasant as you hoped, whether it has realized your expectations."</p>
+
+<p>"Does anything ever do that?" she asked, a little flippantly. "It is
+different, of course. I do not think that I should be willing to go back
+to Blakely, at any rate."</p>
+
+<p>"You have made a great many friends," he remarked. "I hear of you
+continually."</p>
+
+<p>"A host of acquaintances," she remarked. "I do not think that I have
+materially increased the circle of my friends. I hear of you too, Sir
+Leslie, very often. It seems that people give you a good deal of credit
+for inducing my uncle to come back into politics."</p>
+
+<p>"I certainly did my best to persuade him," Sir Leslie answered, smoothly.
+"If I had known how much anxiety he was going to cause us I might perhaps
+have been a little less keen."</p>
+
+<p>"Anxiety!" she repeated.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes! Do you know where he is now?"</p>
+
+<p>"I have no idea," Clara answered. "All that I do know is that he has gone
+away for three weeks, and that I am going to stay with the Duchess till
+he comes back. It is very nice of her, and all that, of course, but I
+feel rather as though I were going into prison. The Duchess isn't exactly
+the modern sort of chaperon."</p>
+
+<p>Borrowdean nodded sympathetically.</p>
+
+<p>"And consider my anxiety," he remarked. "Your uncle has gone North to
+consider the true position of the labouring classes. Now Mr. Mannering is
+a brilliant politician and a sound thinker, but he is also a man of
+sentiment. They will drug him with it up there. He will probably come
+back with half a dozen new schemes, and we don't want them, you know. He
+ought to be speaking at Glasgow and Leeds this week. He simply ignores
+his responsibilities. He yields to a sudden whim and leaves us <i>plantes
+la</i>."</p>
+
+<p>She seemed scarcely to have heard the conclusion of his sentence. Her
+attention was fixed upon a group of men who were talking near.</p>
+
+<p>"Do you know&mdash;isn't that Major Bristow?" she asked Borrowdean, abruptly.</p>
+
+<p>Borrowdean put up his glass.</p>
+
+<p>"Looks like him," he admitted.</p>
+
+<p>"I should be so much obliged," she said, "if you would tell him that
+I wish to see him. I have a message for his sister," she concluded,
+a little lamely.</p>
+
+<p>Borrowdean did as he was asked. He noticed the slight impatience of the
+man as he delivered his message, and the flush with which she greeted
+him. Then, with a little shrug of the shoulders, he pursued his way.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_VIIIa" id="CHAPTER_VIIIa"></a>CHAPTER VIII</h2>
+
+<h3>A PAGE FROM THE PAST</h3>
+
+
+<p>She swept into the room, humming a light opera tune, bringing with her
+the usual flood of perfumes, suggestion of cosmetics, a vivid apparition
+of the artificial. Her skirts rustled aggressively, her voice was just
+one degree too loud. Mannering rose to his feet a little wearily.</p>
+
+<p>She looked at him with raised eyebrows.</p>
+
+<p>"Heavens!" she exclaimed. "What have you been doing with yourself,
+Lawrence? You look like a ghost!"</p>
+
+<p>"I am quite well," he answered, calmly.</p>
+
+<p>"Then you don't look it," she answered, bluntly. "Where have you been for
+the last few weeks?"</p>
+
+<p>"Up in the North," he answered. "It was very hot, and I had a great deal
+to do. I suppose I am suffering, like the rest of us, from a little
+overwork."</p>
+
+<p>She spread herself out in a chair opposite to him.</p>
+
+<p>"Don't stand," she said; "you fidget me. I have something to say to you."</p>
+
+<p>"So I gathered from your note," he remarked.</p>
+
+<p>"You haven't hurried."</p>
+
+<p>"I only got back to London last night," he answered. "I could scarcely
+come sooner, could I?"</p>
+
+<p>"I suppose not," she admitted.</p>
+
+<p>Then for a moment or two she was silent. She was watching him a little
+curiously.</p>
+
+<p>"Is this true?" she asked, "this rumour?"</p>
+
+<p>"Won't you be a little more explicit?" he begged.</p>
+
+<p>"They say that you are going to marry the Duchess of Lenchester!"</p>
+
+<p>"It is true," he answered.</p>
+
+<p>She leaned forward. Her clasped hands rested upon her knee. She seemed to
+be examining the tip of her patent shoe. Suddenly she looked up at him.</p>
+
+<p>"You ought to have come and told me yourself!" she said.</p>
+
+<p>"I had no opportunity," he reminded her. "I left London the morning
+after&mdash;it happened&mdash;and I returned last night."</p>
+
+<p>"Political business?" she asked.</p>
+
+<p>"Entirely."</p>
+
+<p>"Lawrence," she said, "I don't like it."</p>
+
+<p>"Why not?" he asked. "Has mine been such a successful life, do you think,
+that you need grudge me a little happiness towards its close?"</p>
+
+<p>"Bosh!" she answered. "You are only forty-six. You are a young man
+still."</p>
+
+<p>"I had forgotten my years," he declared. "I only know that I am tired."</p>
+
+<p>"You look it," she remarked. "I must say that there is very little of the
+triumphant suitor about you. You work too hard, Lawrence."</p>
+
+<p>"If I do," he asked, with a note of fierceness in his tone, "whose fault
+is it? I was almost happy at Blakely. I had almost learned to forget. It
+was you who dragged me out again. You were not satisfied with half of my
+income; you were always in debt, always wanting more money. Then
+Borrowdean made use of you. He wanted me back into politics, you wanted
+more money for your follies and extravagances. Back I had to come into
+harness. Blanche, I've tried to do my duty to you, but there is a limit.
+I owed you a comfortable place in life, and I have tried to see that you
+have it. I have never refused anything you have asked me, I have never
+mentioned the sacrifices which I have been forced to make. But there is
+a limit. I draw it here. I will not suffer any interference between the
+Duchess of Lenchester and myself!"</p>
+
+<p>Blanche Phillimore rose slowly to her feet. He was used to her fits of
+passion, but there was no sign of anything of the sort in her face. She
+was agitated, but in some new way. Her words were an attack, but her
+manner suggested rather an appeal. Her large, fine eyes, her one
+perfectly natural feature, were soft and luminous. They seemed somehow to
+transfigure her face. To him it seemed like the foolish, handsome woman
+of fifteen years ago who had suddenly come to life again.</p>
+
+<p>"You owed me&mdash;a comfortable place in life, Lawrence! Thank&mdash;you. You have
+paid the debt very well. You owed me&mdash;a respectable guardianship; you
+paid that, too. Thank you again. Now tell me, do you owe me nothing
+else?"</p>
+
+<p>"I owed you one debt," he said, gravely, "which neither I nor any other
+man who incurs it can ever discharge."</p>
+
+<p>"I am glad you realize it," she answered. "But have you ever tried to
+discharge it? You have given me a home and money to throw away on any
+folly which could kill thought. What about the rest?"</p>
+
+<p>"Blanche," he said, gravely, "the rest was impossible! You know that as
+well as I do."</p>
+
+<p>"It is fifteen years ago, Lawrence," she said, "and all that time we have
+fenced with our words. Now I am going to speak a little more plainly. You
+robbed me of my husband. The fault may not have been wholly yours, but
+the fact remains. You struck him, and he died. I was left alone!"</p>
+
+<p>Mannering's face was ashen. The whole horrible scene was rising up again
+before him. He covered his face with his hands. It was more distinct than
+ever. He saw the man's flushed face, heard his stream of abuse, felt the
+sting of his blow, the hot anger with which he had struck back. Then
+those few awful moments of suspense, the moment afterwards when they had
+looked at one another. He shivered! Why had she let loose this flood of
+memories? She was speaking to him again.</p>
+
+<p>"I was left alone," she repeated, quietly, "and I have been alone ever
+since. You don't know much about women, Lawrence. You never did! Try and
+realize, though, what that must mean to a woman like myself, not strong,
+not clever, with very few resources&mdash;just a woman. I cared for my
+husband, I suppose, in an average sort of way. At any rate he loved me.
+Then&mdash;there was you. Oh, you never made love to me, of course. You were
+not the sort of man to make love to another man's wife. But you used to
+show that you liked to be with me, Lawrence. Your voice and your eyes and
+your whole manner used to tell me that. Then there came&mdash;that hideous
+day! I lost you both. What have I had since, Lawrence?"</p>
+
+<p>"Very little, I am afraid, worth having."</p>
+
+<p>"'Very little&mdash;worth having'!" She flung the words from her with
+passionate scorn. "I had your alms, your cold, hurried visits, when you
+seemed to shiver if our fingers touched. It would have seemed to you, I
+suppose, a terrible sin to have touched the lips of the woman whom you
+had helped to rob of her husband, to have spoken kindly to her, to have
+given her at least a little affection to warm her heart. Poor me! What a
+hell you made of my days, with your selfish model life, your panderings
+to conscience. I didn't want much, you know, Lawrence," she said, with a
+sudden choking in her voice. "I would never have robbed you of your peace
+of mind. All I wanted was kindness. And I think, Lawrence, that it was a
+debt, but you never paid it."</p>
+
+<p>Mannering had a moment of self-revelation, a terrible, lurid moment.
+Every word that she had said was true.</p>
+
+<p>"You have never spoken to me like this before," he reminded her,
+desperately. "I never knew that you cared."</p>
+
+<p>"Don't lie!" she answered, calmly. "You turned your head away that you
+might not see. In your heart you knew very well. What else, do you think,
+made me, a very ordinary, nervous sort of woman, get you out of the house
+that day, tell my story, the story that shielded you, without faltering,
+put even the words into your own mouth? It was because I was fool enough
+to care! And oh, my God, how you have tortured me since! You would sit
+there, coldly censorious, and reason with me about my friends, my manner
+of life. I knew what you thought. You didn't hide it very well. Lawrence,
+I wonder I didn't kill you!"</p>
+
+<p>"I wish that you had," he said, bitterly.</p>
+
+<p>She nodded.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, I know how you are feeling just now," she said. "Truth strikes home,
+you know, and it hurts just a little, doesn't it? In a few days your
+admirable common sense will prevail. You will say to yourself: 'She was
+that sort of woman, she had that sort of disposition, she was bound to
+go to the dogs, anyway!' So you are going to marry the Duchess of
+Lenchester, Lawrence!"</p>
+
+<p>He stood up.</p>
+
+<p>"Blanche," he said, "that was all a mistake. I didn't understand. Let us
+forget that day altogether. Marry me now, and I will try to make up for
+these past years."</p>
+
+<p>She stared at him blankly. The colour in her cheek was like a lurid patch
+under the pallor of her skin. She gave a little gasp, and her hand went
+to her side. Then she laughed hardly, almost offensively.</p>
+
+<p>"What a man of sentiment," she declared. "After fifteen years, too, and
+only just engaged to another woman! No, thank you, my dear Lawrence. I've
+lived my life, such as it has been. I'm not so very old, but I look
+fifty, and I've vices enough to blacken an entire neighbourhood. Fancy,
+if people saw me, and heard that you might have married the Duchess of
+Lenchester. They'd hint at an asylum."</p>
+
+<p>"Never mind about other people," he said. "Give me a chance, Blanche, to
+show that I'm not such an absolute brute."</p>
+
+<p>"Rubbish," she interrupted. "Fifteen years ago I would have married you.
+In fact, I expected to. The reason why I found the courage to shield you
+from any unpleasantness that awful day was because I knew if trouble came
+and there was any scandal you would feel yourself obliged to marry me,
+and I wanted you to marry me&mdash;because you wanted to. What an idiot I was!
+Now, please go away, Lawrence. Marry the Duchess, if you like, but don't
+worry me with your re-awakened conscience. I'm going my own way for the
+rest of my few years, and the less I see of you the better I shall be
+pleased. You will forgive me&mdash;but I have an engagement&mdash;down the river!
+I really must hurry you off."</p>
+
+<p>Her teeth were set close together, the sobs seemed tangled in her throat.
+It seemed to her that all the longing in her life was concentrated in
+that one passionate desire, that he should seize her in his arms now,
+hold her there&mdash;tell her that it had all been a mistake, that the ugly
+times were dreams, that after all he had cared&mdash;a little! The room swam
+round with her, but she pointed smilingly to the door, which her trim
+parlour-maid was holding open. And Mannering went.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_IXa" id="CHAPTER_IXa"></a>CHAPTER IX</h2>
+
+<h3>THE FALTERING OF MANNERING</h3>
+
+
+<p>Mannering left by the afternoon train for Hampshire, where he was to be
+the guest for a few days of the leader of his party. He arrived without
+sending word of his coming, to find the whole of the house party absent
+at a cricket match. The short respite was altogether welcome to him. He
+changed his clothes and wandered off into the gardens. Here an hour or so
+later Berenice's maid found him.</p>
+
+<p>"Her Grace would like to see you, sir, if you would come to her
+sitting-room," the girl said, with a demure smile.</p>
+
+<p>Mannering, with something of an inward groan, followed her. Berenice,
+very slim and stately in her simple white muslin gown, rose from the
+couch as he entered, and held out her hands.</p>
+
+<p>"At last," she murmured. "You provoking man, to stay away so long. And
+what have you been doing with yourself?"</p>
+
+<p>Her sentence concluded with a little note of dismay. Mannering was
+positively haggard in the clear afternoon light. There were lines
+underneath his eyes, and his face had a tense, drawn appearance. He did
+not kiss her, as she had more than half expected. He held her hands for
+a moment, and then sank down upon the couch by her side.</p>
+
+<p>"It was not exactly easy work&mdash;up there," he said.</p>
+
+<p>She noticed the repression.</p>
+
+<p>"Tell me all about it," she begged.</p>
+
+<p>His thoughts surged back to those three weeks of tragedy. His personal
+misery became for the moment a shadowy thing. The sorrows of one man,
+what were they to the breaking hearts of millions? He thought of the
+children, and he shuddered.</p>
+
+<p>"It isn't so much to tell," he said. "I have been to a dozen or so of the
+largest towns in the North, and have taken the manufacturers one by one.
+I have taken their wage sheets and compared them with past years. The
+result was always the same. Less money distributed amongst more people.
+Afterwards we went amongst the people themselves&mdash;to see how they lived.
+It was like a chapter from the inferno&mdash;an epic of loathsome tragedy. I
+have seen the children, Berenice, and God help the next generation."</p>
+
+<p>"You must not forget, Lawrence," she said, "that character is an
+essential factor in poverty. Poverty there must always be, because of
+the idle and shiftless."</p>
+
+<p>"Individual poverty, yes," he answered. "Not wholesale poverty, not
+streets of it, towns of it. I don't talk about starving people, although
+I saw them too. Our vicious charitable system may keep their cry from our
+ears, but my sympathies go out to the man who ought to be earning two
+pounds a week, and who is earning fifteen shillings; the man who used to
+have his bit of garden, and smoke, and Sunday clothes, and a day or so's
+holiday now and then. He was a contented, decent, God-fearing citizen,
+the backbone of the whole nation, and he has been blotted away from the
+face of the earth. They work now passively, like dumb brutes, to resist
+starvation, and human character isn't strong enough for such a strain.
+The public houses thrive, and the pawnshops are full. But the children
+haven't enough to eat. They are growing up lank, white, prematurely aged,
+the spectres to dance us statesmen down into hell."</p>
+
+<p>"You are overwrought, dear," she said, gently. "You have been in the
+hands of a man whose object it was to show you only one side of all
+this."</p>
+
+<p>"I have sought for the truth," Mannering answered, "and I have seen it. I
+have learned more in three weeks than all the Commissions and statistics
+and Board-of-Trade figures have taught me in five years."</p>
+
+<p>"And yet," she said, thoughtfully, "you hesitated about that last Navy
+vote. Don't you see that the imperialism which you are a little disposed
+to shrug your shoulders at is the most logical and complete cure for all
+this? We must extend and maintain our colonies, and people them with our
+surplus population."</p>
+
+<p>He shook his head.</p>
+
+<p>"That is not a policy which would ever appeal to me," he answered. "It
+is like an external operation to remove a malady which is of internal
+origin. Either our social laws or our political systems are at fault
+when our trade leaves us, and our labouring classes are unable to earn
+a fair wage. That is the position we are in to-day."</p>
+
+<p>She rose to her feet, and walked restlessly up and down the room.
+Mannering had the look of a crushed man. She watched him critically.
+Writers in magazines and reviews had often made a study of his character.
+She remembered a brilliant contributor to a recent review, who had dwelt
+upon a certain lack of cohesion in his constitution, an inability to
+relegate sentiment to its proper place in dealing with the great workaday
+problems of the world. Conscientious, but never to be trusted, was the
+last anomalous but luminous criticism. Was this frame of mind of his a
+sign of it, she wondered? His place in politics was fixed and sure. What
+right had he, as a man of principle, with a great following, to run even
+the risk of being led away by false prophets? A certain hardness stole
+into her face as she watched him. She tried to steel herself against the
+sight of his suffering, and though she was not wholly successful, there
+was a distinct change in her tone and attitude towards him as she resumed
+her seat.</p>
+
+<p>"Tell me," she asked, "what this means from a practical point of view?
+How will it effect your plans?"</p>
+
+<p>"I must give up my public meetings," he answered, slowly. "I have written
+to Manningham to tell him that he must get some one else to lead the
+campaign."</p>
+
+<p>Berenice was very pale. So many of these wonderful dreams of hers seemed
+vanishing into thin air.</p>
+
+<p>"This is a terrible blow," she said. "It is the worst thing which
+has happened to us for years. Are you going over to the other side,
+Lawrence?"</p>
+
+<p>He shook his head.</p>
+
+<p>"I can't do that altogether," he said. "The position is simply this: I am
+still, so far as my judgment and research go, opposed to tariff reform.
+On the other hand, I dare not take any leading part in fighting any
+scheme which has the barest chance of bringing better times to the
+working classes. I simply stand apart for the moment on this question."</p>
+
+<p>She laughed a little bitterly.</p>
+
+<p>"There is no other question," she said. "You will never be allowed to
+remain neutral. You appear to me to be in a very singular position. You
+are divided between sentiment and conviction, and you prefer to yield to
+the former. Lawrence, do not be hasty! Think of all that depends upon
+your judgment in this matter. From the very first you have been the
+bitterest and most formidable opponent of this absurd scheme. If you turn
+round you will unsettle public opinion throughout the country. Remember,
+the power of the statesman is almost a sacred charge."</p>
+
+<p>"I am remembering," he murmured, "those children. I am bound to think
+this matter out, Berenice. I am going to meet Graham and Mellors next
+week. I shall not rest until I have made some effort to put my hand upon
+the weak spot. Somewhere there is a rotten place. I want to reach it."</p>
+
+<p>"Do you mean to give up your seat?" she asked.</p>
+
+<p>"Not unless I am asked to," he answered. "I may need to work from there."</p>
+
+<p>She sighed.</p>
+
+<p>"I suppose your mind is quite made up," she said.</p>
+
+<p>"Absolutely," he answered.</p>
+
+<p>Her maid came in just then, and Mannering offered to withdraw. She made
+no effort to detain him, and he went at once in search of his host and
+hostess. He found every one assembled in the hall below. Lord Redford,
+Borrowdean, and the chief whip of his party were talking together in a
+corner, and from their significant look at his approach, he felt sure
+that he himself had been the subject of their conversation. The situation
+was more than a little awkward. Lord Redford stepped forward and welcomed
+him cordially.</p>
+
+<p>"I'm afraid you've been knocking yourself up, Mannering," he said. "I've
+just been proposing to Culthorpe here that we bar politics completely for
+twenty-four hours. We'll leave the dinner table with the ladies, and you
+and I will play golf to-morrow. I've had Taylor down here, and I can
+assure you that my links are worth playing over now. Then on Thursday
+we'll have a conference."</p>
+
+<p>"I was scarcely sure," Mannering said, with a slight smile, "whether
+I should be expected to stay until then. Sir Leslie has told you of my
+telegrams?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, yes," Lord Redford said, quickly. "We've postponed the meetings for
+the present. We'll talk that all out later on. You've had some tea, I
+hope? No? Well, Eleanor, you are a nice hostess," he added, turning to
+his wife. "Give Mr. Mannering some tea at once, and feed him up with hot
+cakes. Come into the billiard-room afterwards, Mannering, will you? I've
+got a new table in the winter-garden, and we're going to have a pool
+before dinner."</p>
+
+<p>Berenice came in and laid her hand upon her host's arm.</p>
+
+<p>"You need not worry about Mr. Mannering," she declared. "He is going to
+have tea with me at that little table, and I am going to take him for a
+walk in the park afterwards."</p>
+
+<p>"So long as you feed him well," Lord Redford declared, with a little
+laugh, "and turn up in good time for dinner, you may do what you like. If
+you take my advice, Berenice, you will join our league. We have pledged
+ourselves not to utter a word of shop for twenty-four hours."</p>
+
+<p>"I submit willingly," Berenice answered. "Mr. Mannering and I will find
+something else to talk about."</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_Xa" id="CHAPTER_Xa"></a>CHAPTER X</h2>
+
+<h3>THE END OF A DREAM</h3>
+
+
+<p>"You can guess why I brought you here, perhaps," Berenice said, gently,
+as she motioned him to sit down by her side. "This place, more than any
+other I know, certainly more than any other at Bayleigh, seems to me to
+be completely restful. There are the trees, you see, and the water, and
+the swans, that are certainly the laziest creatures I know. You look to
+me as though you needed rest, Lawrence."</p>
+
+<p>"I suppose I do," he answered, slowly. "I am not sure, though, whether
+I deserve it."</p>
+
+<p>"You are rather a self-distrustful mortal," she remarked, leaning back in
+her corner and looking at him from under her parasol. "You have worked
+hard all the session, and now you have finished up by three weeks of,
+I should think, herculean labour. If you do not deserve rest who does?"</p>
+
+<p>"The rest which I deserve," Mannering answered, bitterly, "is the rest of
+those whose bones are bleaching amongst the caves and corals of the sea
+there! That is Matapan Point, isn't it, where the hidden rocks are?"</p>
+
+<p>She nodded.</p>
+
+<p>"Really, you are developing into a very gloomy person," she said.
+"Lawrence, don't let us fence with one another any longer. What you may
+decide to do politically may be ruinous to your career, to your chance of
+usefulness in the world, and to my hopes. But I want you to understand
+this. It can make no difference to me. I have had dreams perhaps of a
+great future, of being the wife of a Prime Minister who would lead his
+country into a new era of prosperity, who would put the last rivets into
+the bonds of a great imperial empire. But one never realizes all one's
+hopes, Lawrence. I love politics. I love being behind the scenes, and
+helping to move the pawns across the board. But I am a woman, too,
+Lawrence, and I love you. Put everything connected with your public life
+on one side. Let me ask you this. You are changed. Has anything come
+between us as man and woman?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," he answered, "something has come between us."</p>
+
+<p>She sat quite still for several minutes. She prayed that he too might
+keep silence, and he seemed to know her thoughts. Over the little sheet
+of ornamental water, down the glade of beech and elm trees narrowing
+towards the cliffs, her eyes travelled seawards. It was to her a terrible
+moment. Mannering had represented so much to her, and her standard was a
+high one. If there was a man living whom she would have reckoned above
+the weaknesses of the herd, it was he. In those days at Blakely she had
+almost idealized him. The simple purity of his life there, his delicate
+and carefully chosen pleasures, combined with his almost passionate love
+of the open places of the earth, had led her to regard him as something
+different from any other man whom she had ever known. All Borrowdean's
+hints and open statements had gone for very little. She had listened and
+retained her trust. And now she had a horrible fear. Something had gone
+out of the man, something which went for strength, something without
+which he seemed to lack that splendid militant vitality which had always
+seemed to her so admirable. Perhaps he was going to make a confession,
+one of those crude, clumsy confessions of a stained life, which have
+drawn the colour and the joy from so many beautiful dreams. She shivered
+a little, but she inclined her head to listen.</p>
+
+<p>"Well," she said, "what is it?"</p>
+
+<p>"I have asked another woman to marry me only a few hours ago," he said,
+quietly.</p>
+
+<p>Berenice was a proud woman, and for the moment she felt her love for this
+man a dried-up and shrivelled thing. She was white to the lips, but she
+commanded her voice, and her eyes met his coldly.</p>
+
+<p>"May I inquire into the circumstances&mdash;of this&mdash;somewhat remarkable
+proceeding?" she inquired.</p>
+
+<p>"There is a woman," he said, "whose life I helped to wreck&mdash;not in the
+orthodox way," he added, with a note of scorn in his tone, "but none the
+less effectually. The one recompense I never thought of offering her was
+marriage. I have seen that, despite all my efforts to aid her, her life
+has been a failure. Her friends have been the wrong sort of friends, her
+life the wrong sort of life. What it was that was dragging her downwards
+I never guessed, for she, too, in her way, was a proud woman. To-day she
+sent for me. What passed between us is her secret as much as mine. I can
+only tell you that before I left I had asked her to marry me."</p>
+
+<p>"I think," she said, calmly, "that you need tell me no more."</p>
+
+<p>"There is very little more that I can tell you," he answered. "I
+have no affection for her, and she has refused to marry me. But she
+remains&mdash;between us&mdash;irrevocably!"</p>
+
+<p>"You are lucidity itself," she replied. "Will you forgive me if I leave
+you? I am scarcely used to this sort of situation, and I should like to
+be alone."</p>
+
+<p>"Go by all means, Berenice," he answered. "You and I are better apart.
+But there is one thing which I must say to you, and you must hear. What
+has passed between you and me is the epitome of the love-making of my
+life. You are the only woman whom I have desired to make my wife. You are
+the only woman whom I have loved, and shall love until I die. I can make
+you no reparation, none is possible! Yet these things are my
+justification."</p>
+
+<p>Berenice had turned away. The passionate ring of truth in his tone
+arrested her footsteps. She paused. Her heart was beating very fast, her
+coldness was all assumed. It was so much happiness to throw away, if
+indeed there was a chance. She turned and faced him, nervous, gaunt,
+hollow-eyed, the wreck of his former self. Pity triumphed in spite of
+herself. What was this leaven of weakness in the man, she wondered, which
+had so suddenly broken him down? He had only to hold on his way and he
+would be Prime Minister in a year. And at the moment of trial he had
+crumpled up like a piece of false metal. A wave of false sentiment, a
+maniacal hyper-conscientiousness, had been sufficient to sap the very
+strength from his bones. And then&mdash;there was this other woman. Was she to
+let him go without an effort? He might recover his sanity. It was perhaps
+a mere nervous breakdown, which had made him the prey of strange fancies.
+She spoke to him differently. She spoke once more as the woman who loved
+him.</p>
+
+<p>"Lawrence," she said, "you are telling me too much, and not enough. If
+you want to send me away I must go. But tell me this first. What claim
+has this woman upon you?"</p>
+
+<p>"It is not my secret," he groaned. "I cannot tell you."</p>
+
+<p>"Leslie Borrowdean knows it," she said. "I could have heard it, but I
+refused to listen. Remember, whatever you may owe to other people you owe
+me something, too."</p>
+
+<p>"It is true," he answered. "Well, listen. I killed her husband!"</p>
+
+<p>"You! You&mdash;killed her husband!" she repeated vaguely.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes! She shielded me. There was an inquest, and they found that he had
+heart disease. No one knew that I had even seen him that day, no one save
+she and a servant, who is dead. But the truth lives. He had reason to be
+angry with me&mdash;over a money affair. He came home furious, and found me
+alone with his wife. He called me&mdash;well, it was a lie&mdash;and he struck me.
+I threw him on one side&mdash;and he fell. When we picked him up he was dead."</p>
+
+<p>"It was terrible!" she said, "but you should have braved it out. They
+could have done very little to you."</p>
+
+<p>"I know it," he answered. "But I was young, and my career was just
+beginning. The thing stunned me. She insisted upon secrecy. It would
+reflect upon her, she thought, if the truth came out, so I acquiesced,
+I left the house unseen. All these days I have had to carry the burden of
+this thing with me. To-day&mdash;seemed to be the climax. For the first time I
+understood."</p>
+
+<p>"She can never marry you," Berenice said. "It would be horrible."</p>
+
+<p>"She refused to marry me to-day," he answered, "but she laid her life
+bare, and I cannot marry any one else."</p>
+
+<p>Berenice was trembling. She was no longer ashamed to show her agitation.</p>
+
+<p>"I am very sorry for you, Lawrence," she said. "I am very sorry for
+myself. Good-bye!"</p>
+
+<p>She left him, and Mannering sank back upon the seat.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XIa" id="CHAPTER_XIa"></a>CHAPTER XI</h2>
+
+<h3>BORROWDEAN SHOWS HIS "HAND"</h3>
+
+
+<p>"To be plain with you," Borrowdean remarked, "Mannering's defection would
+be irremediable. He alone unites Redford, myself, and&mdash;well, to put it
+crudely, let us say the Imperialistic Liberal Party with Manningham and
+the old-fashioned Whigs who prefer the ruts. There is no other leader
+possible. Redford and I talked till daylight this morning. Now, can
+nothing be done with Mannering?"</p>
+
+<p>"To be plain with you, too, then, Sir Leslie," Berenice answered, "I do
+not think that anything can be done with him. In his present frame of
+mind I should say that he is better left alone. He has worked himself up
+into a thoroughly sentimental and nervous state. For the moment he has
+lost his sense of balance."</p>
+
+<p>Borrowdean nodded.</p>
+
+<p>"Desperate necessity," he said, "sometimes justifies desperate measures.
+We need Mannering, the country and our cause need him. If argument will
+not prevail there is one last alternative left to us. It may not be such
+an alternative as we should choose, but beggars must not be choosers. I
+think that you will know what I mean."</p>
+
+<p>"I have no idea," Berenice answered.</p>
+
+<p>"You are aware," he continued, "that there is in Mannering's past history
+an episode, the publication of which would entail somewhat serious
+consequences to him."</p>
+
+<p>"Well?"</p>
+
+<p>It was a most eloquent monosyllable, but Borrowdean had gone too far to
+retreat.</p>
+
+<p>"I propose that we make use of it," he said. "Mannering's attitude is
+rankly foolish, or I would not suggest such a thing. But I hold that we
+are entitled, under the circumstances, to make use of any means whatever
+to bring him to his senses."</p>
+
+<p>Berenice smiled. They were standing together upon a small hillock in the
+park, watching the golf.</p>
+
+<p>"Charlatanism in politics does not appeal to me," she said, drily. "Any
+party that adopted such means would completely alienate my sympathies.
+No, my dear Sir Leslie, don't stoop to such low-down means. Mannering is
+honest, but infatuated. Win him back by fair means, if you can, but don't
+attempt anything of the sort you are suggesting. I, too, know his
+history, from his own lips. Any one who tried to use it against him,
+would forfeit my friendship!"</p>
+
+<p>"Success then would be bought too dearly," Borrowdean answered, with
+a gallantry which it cost him a good deal to assume. "May I pass on,
+Duchess, in connexion with this matter, to ask you a somewhat more
+personal question?"</p>
+
+<p>"I think," Berenice said, calmly, "that I can spare you the necessity.
+You were going to speak, I believe, of the engagement between Lawrence
+Mannering and myself."</p>
+
+<p>"I was," Borrowdean admitted.</p>
+
+<p>"It does not exist any longer," Berenice said, "I should be glad if you
+would inform any one who has heard the rumour that it is without any
+foundation."</p>
+
+<p>Borrowdean looked thoughtfully at the woman by his side.</p>
+
+<p>"I am very glad to hear it," he declared. "I am glad for many reasons,
+and I am glad personally."</p>
+
+<p>She raised her eyebrows.</p>
+
+<p>"Indeed! I cannot imagine how it should affect you personally."</p>
+
+<p>"I perhaps said more than I meant to," he replied, calmly. "I am a poor,
+struggling politician myself, whose capital consists of brains and a
+capacity for work, and whose hopes are coloured with perhaps too daring
+ambitions. Amongst them&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Mr. Mannering has holed out from off the green," she interrupted.
+"Positively immoral, I call it."</p>
+
+<p>"Amongst them," Borrowdean continued, calmly, "is one which some day or
+other I must tell you, for indeed you are concerned in it."</p>
+
+<p>"I can assure you, Sir Leslie," she said, looking at him steadily,
+"that I am not at all a sympathetic person. My strong advice to you would
+be&mdash;not to tell me. I do not think that you would gain anything by it."</p>
+
+<p>Borrowdean met his fate with a bow and a shrug of the shoulders.</p>
+
+<p>"It only remains," he said, "for me to beg you to pardon what might seem
+like presumption. Shall we meet them on the last green?"</p>
+
+<p>Mannering would have avoided Berenice, but she gave him no option. She
+laid her hand upon his arm, and volunteered to show him a new way home.</p>
+
+<p>"You must be on your guard, Lawrence," she said. "Lord Redford is very
+fond of concealing his plans to the last moment, but he is a very clever
+man. And Sir Leslie Borrowdean would give his little finger to catch you
+tripping. All this avoidance of politics is part of a scheme. They will
+spring something upon you quite suddenly. Don't give any hasty pledges."</p>
+
+<p>"Thank you for your warning," he said. "I will be careful."</p>
+
+<p>"Tell me," she said, "as a friend, what are your plans? Forget that I am
+interested in politics altogether. I simply want to know how you are
+spending your time for the next few months."</p>
+
+<p>"It depends upon them," he answered, looking downwards into the valley,
+where Lord Redford and Borrowdean were walking side by side. "If they ask
+me to resign my seat I shall go North again, and it is just possible that
+I might come back into the House as a labour member. On the other hand,
+if they are content with such support as I can give them, and to have me
+on the fence at present so far as the tariff question is concerned, why,
+I shall go back and do the best I can for them."</p>
+
+<p>"You are not quite won over to the other side yet, then," she remarked,
+smiling.</p>
+
+<p>"Not yet," he answered. "If ever there was an honest doubter, I am one.
+If I had never left my study, England could not have contained a more
+rabid opponent of any change in our fiscal policy than I. I am like a
+small boy who is absolutely sure that he has worked out his sum
+correctly, but finds the answer is not the one which his examiner
+expects. There is something wrong somewhere. I want, if I can, to
+discover it. I only want the truth! I don't see why it should be so hard
+to find, why figures and common sense should clash entirely and horribly
+with existing facts."</p>
+
+<p>"You wore dun-coloured spectacles when you took your walks abroad," she
+said, smiling. "No one else seems to have discovered so distressing a
+state of affairs as you have spoken of."</p>
+
+<p>"Because they never looked beneath the surface," he answered. "I myself
+might have failed to understand if I had not been shown. Remember that
+our workingman of the better class does not go marching through the
+streets with an unemployed banner and a tin cup when he is in want. He
+takes his half wages and closes the door upon his sufferings. God help
+him!"</p>
+
+<p>"Adieu, politics," she declared, with a shrug of the shoulders. "Isn't
+that Clara playing croquet with Major Bristow? I wish I didn't dislike
+that man so much. I hate to see the child with him."</p>
+
+<p>Mannering sighed.</p>
+
+<p>"Poor Clara!" he said. "I am afraid I have left her a good deal to
+herself lately."</p>
+
+<p>"I am afraid you have," she agreed, a little gravely. "May I give you
+a word of advice?"</p>
+
+<p>"You know that I should be grateful for it," he declared.</p>
+
+<p>"Be sure that she never goes to the Bristows again, and ask her whether
+she has any other card debts. It may be my fancy, but I don't like the
+way that man hangs about her, and looks at her. I am sure that she does
+not like him, and yet she never seems to have the courage to snub him."</p>
+
+<p>"I am very much obliged to you," he said. "I will speak to her to-day."</p>
+
+<p>"I don't know where I am going, or what I shall do for the autumn," she
+continued, with a little sigh, "but if you like to trust Clara with me I
+will look after her. I think that she needs a woman. Yes, I thought so.
+Redford and Sir Leslie are waiting for you. Go and have it out with them,
+my friend."</p>
+
+<p>"You are too kind to me," he said; "kinder than I deserve!"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, I don't know," she answered. "I am afraid that my kindness is only
+another form of selfishness. I am rather a lonely person, you know. Lord
+Redford is beckoning to you. I am going to break up that croquet party."</p>
+
+<p>Mannering joined the other two men. Berenice strolled on to the lawn.
+Major Bristow eyed her coming with some disfavour. He was one of the men
+whom she always ignored. Clara, on the other hand, seemed proportionately
+relieved.</p>
+
+<p>"I want you to come to my room as soon as you possibly can, child,"
+Berenice said. "Shall I wait while you finish your game?"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, I will come at once," Clara exclaimed, laying down her mallet.
+"Major Bristow will not mind, I am sure."</p>
+
+<p>Major Bristow looked as though he did mind very much, but lacked the
+nerve to say so. Berenice calmly took Clara by the arm and led her away.</p>
+
+<p>"You are not engaged to Major Bristow by any chance, are you?" she asked,
+calmly.</p>
+
+<p>"Engaged to Major Bristow? Heavens, no!" Clara answered. "I don't think
+he is in the least a marrying man."</p>
+
+<p>"So much the better for our sex," Berenice answered. "I wouldn't spend so
+much time with him, my dear, if I were you. I have known people with
+nicer reputations."</p>
+
+<p>Clara turned a shade paler.</p>
+
+<p>"I can never get away from him," she said. "He follows me&mdash;everywhere,
+and&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"You do not by any chance, I suppose, owe him money?" Berenice asked.
+"They tell me that he has a somewhat objectionable habit of winning money
+from girls, more than they can afford to pay, and then suggesting that it
+stand over for a time."</p>
+
+<p>Clara turned towards her with terrified eyes.</p>
+
+<p>"I&mdash;I do owe Major Bristow a little still," she admitted. "I seem to have
+been so unlucky. He told me that any time would do, that I should win it
+back again, and I had no idea what stakes we were playing. I don't touch
+a card now at all, but this was at Ellingham House. They insisted on my
+making a fourth at bridge."</p>
+
+<p>Berenice tightened her grasp upon the girl's arm.</p>
+
+<p>"Don't say anything about this to your uncle just now," she insisted. "I
+am going to take you up to my room and write you a cheque for the amount,
+whatever it may be. Afterwards I will have a talk with Major Bristow.
+Nonsense, child, don't cry! The money is nothing to me, and I always
+promised your uncle that I would look after you a little."</p>
+
+<p>"I have been such a fool!" the girl sobbed.</p>
+
+<p>Berenice for a moment was also sad. Her lips quivered, her eyes were
+wistful.</p>
+
+<p>"We all think that sometimes, child," she said, quietly. "We all have our
+foolish moments and our hours of repentance, even the wisest of us!"</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XIIa" id="CHAPTER_XIIa"></a>CHAPTER XII</h2>
+
+<h3>SIR LESLIE BORROWDEAN INCURS A HEAVY DEBT</h3>
+
+
+<p>"I suppose," Lord Redford remarked, thoughtfully, "politics represents a
+different thing to all of us, according to our temperament. To me, I must
+confess, it is a plain, practical business, the business of law-making.
+To you, Mannering, I fancy that it appeals a little differently. Now, let
+us understand one another. Are you prepared to undertake this campaign
+which we planned out a few months ago?"</p>
+
+<p>"If I did undertake it," Mannering said, "it would be to leave unsaid the
+things which you would naturally expect from me, and to say things of
+which you could not possibly approve. I am very sorry. You can command my
+resignation at any moment, if you will. But my views, though in the main
+they have not changed, are very much modified."</p>
+
+<p>Lord Redford nodded.</p>
+
+<p>"That," he said, "is our misfortune, but it certainly is not your
+fault. As for your resignation, if you crossed the floor of the House
+to-morrow we should not require it of you. You are responsible to your
+constituents only. We dragged you back into public life&mdash;you see I admit
+it freely&mdash;and we are willing to take our risk. Whether you are with us
+or against us, we recognize you as one of those whose place is amongst
+the rulers of the people."</p>
+
+<p>"You are very generous, Lord Redford," Mannering answered.</p>
+
+<p>"Not at all. It is no use being peevish. You are a great disappointment
+to us, but we have not given up hope. If you are not altogether with us
+to-day, there is to-morrow. I tell you frankly, Mannering, that I look
+upon you as a man temporarily led astray by a wave of sentimentality. So
+long as the world lasts there will be rich men and poor, but you must
+always remember in considering this that it is character as well as
+circumstances which is at the root of the acquisition of wealth.
+Generations have gone to the formation of our social fabric. It is the
+slow evolution of the human laws of necessity. The socialist and the
+sentimentalist and the philanthropist, dropping gold through his fingers,
+have each had their fling at it, but their cry is like the cry from the
+wilderness&mdash;a long, lone thing! And then to come to the real point,
+Mannering. Grant for a moment all that you have told Borrowdean and
+myself about the condition of the labour classes in the great towns and
+the universal depression of trade. How can you possibly imagine that the
+imposition of tariff duties is the sovereign, or even a possible, remedy?
+Why, you yourself have been one of the most brilliant pamphleteers
+against anything of the sort. You have been called the Cobden of the day.
+You cannot throw principles away like an old garment."</p>
+
+<p>"Let us leave for one moment," Mannering answered, "the personal side of
+the matter. I have seen in the majority of our large cities terrible and
+convincing proof of the decline of our manufacturing industries. I have
+seen the outcome of this in hundreds of ruined homes, in a whole
+generation coming into the world half starved, half clothed&mdash;God help
+those children. I have always maintained that the labouring classes
+should be the happiest race of people in this country. I find them
+without leisure or recreation, fighting fate with both hands for food.
+Redford, the whole world has never shown us a greater tragedy than the
+one which we others deliberately and persistently close our eyes to&mdash;I
+mean the struggle for life which is being waged in every one of our great
+cities."</p>
+
+<p>"We have statistics," Borrowdean began.</p>
+
+<p>"Damn statistics!" Mannering interrupted. "I have juggled with figures
+myself in the old days, and I know how easy it is. So do you, and so does
+Redford. This is what I want to put to you. The tragedy is there. Perhaps
+those who have faced it and come back again to tell of their experiences
+have been a little hysterical&mdash;the horror of it has carried them away.
+They may not have adopted the most effectual means of making the world
+understand, but it is there. I have seen it. A thousandth part of this
+misery in a country with which we had nothing to do, and no business to
+interfere, and we should be having mass meetings at Exeter Hall, and
+making general asses of ourselves all over the country, shrieking for
+intervention, wasting a whole dictionary of rhetoric, and probably
+getting well snubbed for our pains. And because the murders are by slow
+poison instead of with steel, because they are in our own cities and
+amongst our own people, we accept them with a sort of placid
+satisfaction. You, Lord Redford, speak of character and enunciate social
+laws, and Borrowdean will argue that after all the trade of the country
+is not so bad as it might be, and will make an epigram on the importation
+of sentimentality into politics. In plain words, Lord Redford, we, as a
+party, are asleep to what is going on. One statesman has recognized it,
+and proposed a startling and drastic remedy. We attack the remedy tooth
+and nail, but we place forward no counter proposition. It is as though a
+dying man were attended by two doctors, one of whom has prepared a remedy
+which the other declines to administer without suggesting one of his own.
+It is not a logical position. The medicine may not cure, but let the man
+have his chance of life."</p>
+
+<p>"Your simile," Lord Redford said, "assumes that the man is dying."</p>
+
+<p>"I have seen the mark of death upon his face," Mannering answered. "The
+men who are traitors to their country to-day are those who, healthy
+enough themselves, talk causeless and shallow optimism which is fed alone
+by their own prosperity. The doctrine of Christ is the care of others.
+If you do not believe, the sick-room is open also to you; go there
+unprejudiced, and with an open mind, and you will come away as I have
+come away."</p>
+
+<p>"Must we take it, then, Mannering," Lord Redford said, gravely, "that you
+are prepared to support the administering of the medicine you spoke of?"</p>
+
+<p>Mannering was silent for a moment.</p>
+
+<p>"At least," he said, "I am not going to be amongst those who cry out
+against it and offer nothing themselves. I am going to analyze that
+medicine, and if I see a chance of life in it I shall say, let us run
+a little risk, rather than stand by inactive, to look upon the face of
+death. In other words, I become for the moment a passive figure in
+politics so far as this question is concerned."</p>
+
+<p>Lord Redford held out his hand.</p>
+
+<p>"Let it go at that, Mannering," he said. "I believe that you will come
+back to us. We shall be always glad of your support, but of course you
+will understand that the position from to-day is changed. If you had
+carried the standard, as we had hoped, the reward also was to have been
+yours. We must elect one of ourselves to take your place. To put it
+plainly, your defection now releases us from all pledges."</p>
+
+<p>"I understand," Mannering answered. "It was scarcely ambition which
+brought me back into politics, and I must work for the cause in which I
+believe. If I am forced to take any definite action, I shall, of course,
+resign my seat."</p>
+
+<p>The door closed behind him. Borrowdean struck a match, and Lord Redford
+looked thoughtfully out of the window across the park.</p>
+
+<p>"I was always afraid of this," Borrowdean said, gloomily. "There is a
+leaven of madness in the man."</p>
+
+<p>Lord Redford shrugged his shoulders.</p>
+
+<p>"Genius or madness," he remarked. "We may yet see him a modern Rienzi
+carried into power on the shoulders of the people. Such a man might
+become anything. As a matter of fact, I think that he will go back into
+his study. He has the brain to fashion wonderful thoughts, and the lips
+to fire them into life. But I doubt his adaptability. I cannot imagine
+him ever becoming a real and effective force."</p>
+
+<p>Borrowdean, who was bitterly disappointed, smoked furiously.</p>
+
+<p>"We shall see," he said. "If Mannering is not for us, I think that I can
+at least promise that he does no harm on the other side."</p>
+
+<p>Lord Redford turned away from the window. He eyed Borrowdean curiously.</p>
+
+<p>"It was you," he remarked, "who brought Mannering back into public life.
+You had a certain reward for it, and you would have had a much greater
+one if things had gone our way. But I want you to remember this.
+Mannering is best left alone&mdash;now, for the present. You understand me?"</p>
+
+<p>Borrowdean shrugged his shoulders. There was a good deal too much
+sentiment in politics.</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>Mannering and Berenice came together for a few moments on the terrace
+after dinner. He was not so completely engrossed in his own affairs as
+to fail to notice her lack of colour and a certain weariness of manner,
+which had kept her more silent than usual during the whole evening.</p>
+
+<p>"Well?" she said.</p>
+
+<p>"There is nothing definite," he answered. "You see, the question of
+tariff reform is not before the House at present, and Redford does not
+require me to resign my seat. But of course it will come to that sooner
+or later."</p>
+
+<p>She leaned over the grey balustrade. With her it was a moment of
+weakness. She was suddenly conscious of the fact that she was no longer
+a young woman. The time when she might hope to find in life the actual
+flavour and joy of passionate living was nearing the end. And a little
+while ago they had seemed so near! The pity of it stirred up a certain
+sense of rebellion in her heart. She was still a beautiful woman. She
+knew very well the arts by which men are enslaved. Why should she not try
+them upon him&mdash;this man who loved her, who seemed willing to sacrifice
+both their lives to a piece of senseless quixoticism? Her fingers touched
+his, and held them softly. Thrilled through all his senses, he turned
+towards her wonderingly.</p>
+
+<p>"Are we wise, Lawrence," she whispered, "if indeed you love me? Life is
+so short, and I am not a young woman any more. I have been lonely so
+long. I want a little happiness before I go."</p>
+
+<p>"Don't!" he cried, hoarsely. "You know&mdash;what comes between us."</p>
+
+<p>She was a little indignant, but still tender.</p>
+
+<p>"This woman does not want you, Lawrence," she cried. "I do! Oh,
+Lawrence!"</p>
+
+<p>He faltered. She laid her fingers upon his arm.</p>
+
+<p>"Come down the steps," she murmured, "and I will show you Lady Redford's
+rose-garden."</p>
+
+<p>Her touch was compelling. He could not have resisted it. And about his
+heart lay the joy of her near presence. Side by side they moved along the
+terrace&mdash;it seemed to him that they passed towards their destiny. The
+gentle rustling of her clothes, their slight, mysterious perfume, was
+like music to him. A sudden wave of passion carried him away. The
+primitive virility of the man, awake at last, demanded its birthright.</p>
+
+<p>And then upon the lower step they met Borrowdean, and he placed himself
+squarely in their way.</p>
+
+<p>"I am sorry to interrupt you," he said, gravely, "but Lord Redford has
+sent me out to look for you and to send you at once into the library.
+Something rather serious has happened."</p>
+
+<p>Mannering came down to earth.</p>
+
+<p>"The evening papers have come," Borrowdean said. "The <i>Pall Mall</i> has the
+whole story. You were seen at the working-men's club in Glasgow!"</p>
+
+<p>Mannering turned towards the house. His nerves were all tingling with
+excitement, but the thread had suddenly been snapped. He was no longer in
+danger of yielding to that flood of delicious sensations. His voice had
+been almost steady as he had begged Berenice to excuse him. Berenice
+stood quite still. Her hand was pressed to her side, her dark eyes were
+lit with passion. She leaned forward towards Borrowdean, and seemed about
+to strike him.</p>
+
+<p>"You will find yourself&mdash;repaid for this, Sir Leslie," she murmured.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<a href="images/ill6_th.jpg"><img src="images/ill6_th.jpg" alt=""/></a>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>Then she turned abruptly away. For an hour or more she walked alone
+amongst the trellised walks of Lady Redford's rose-garden. But Mannering
+did not return.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XIIIa" id="CHAPTER_XIIIa"></a>CHAPTER XIII</h2>
+
+<h3>THE WOMAN AND&mdash;THE OTHER WOMAN</h3>
+
+
+<p>"You see, Mannering," Lord Redford said, tapping the outspread evening
+paper with his forefinger, "the situation now presents a different
+aspect. I have no wish to force your hand&mdash;a few hours ago I think I
+proved this. But if you are to remain even nominally with us some sort
+of pronouncement must come from you in reply to these statements."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," Mannering said, "that is quite reasonable."</p>
+
+<p>"The postponement of your campaign has been hinted at before," Lord
+Redford continued, "but we have never used the word abandonment. Now, to
+speak bluntly, the whole fat is in the fire. Your place on the fence is
+no longer possible. You must make your own declaration, and it must be
+for one of three things. You must remain with us, abandon public life for
+a time, or go over to the other side. And you must make promptly an
+announcement of your intentions."</p>
+
+<p>"I have no alternative in the matter," Mannering said. "In fact, I think
+that this has happened opportunely. My presence with you was sure to
+prove something of an embarrassment to all of us. I shall apply for the
+Chiltern Hundreds to-morrow, and I shall not seek to re-enter the present
+Parliament. The few months' respite will be useful to me. I can only
+express to you, Lord Redford, my sincere gratitude for all your
+consideration, and my regret for this disarrangement of your plans."</p>
+
+<p>Lord Redford sighed. Why were men born, he wondered, with such a
+prodigious capacity for playing the fool?</p>
+
+<p>"My chief regret, Mannering," he said, "is for you. The Fates so
+controlled circumstances that you seemed certain to achieve as a young
+man what is the crowning triumph of us veterans in the political world. I
+respect the honest scruples of every man, but it seems to me that you are
+throwing away an unparalleled opportunity in a fit of what a practical
+man like myself can only call sentimentality. I have no more to say.
+Forgive me if I have said too much. For the rest, give us the pleasure of
+your company here for as long as you find it convenient. We will abjure
+politics, and you shall give me my revenge at golf."</p>
+
+<p>Mannering shook his head.</p>
+
+<p>"I am very much obliged to you," he said, "but there is only one course
+open to me. I must go back and make my plans. If I could have a carriage
+for the nine-forty!"</p>
+
+<p>Lord Redford made no effort to induce him to change his mind, though he
+remained courteous to the last.</p>
+
+<p>"I was really glad to have him go," he told Borrowdean afterwards. "His
+very presence&mdash;the thought that there could be such colossal fools in the
+world&mdash;irritated me beyond measure. You can write his epitaph, Leslie, if
+your humorous vein is working, for the man is politically dead."</p>
+
+<p>"One never knows," Berenice said, quietly. "There must be something great
+about a man capable of such prodigious self-sacrifice. For at heart
+Lawrence Mannering is an ambitious man."</p>
+
+<p>Lord Redford shrugged his shoulders.</p>
+
+<p>"Perhaps," he said, "but I am very sure of this. There is nothing so
+great about the man as his folly."</p>
+
+<p>Berenice smiled.</p>
+
+<p>"We shall see," she said. "Personally, I believe that Sir Leslie would
+find his epitaph a little previous. I saw a great deal of Lawrence
+Mannering in the country, and I think that I understand him as well as
+either of you. I believe that his day will come."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, all I can say is," Lord Redford pronounced, "that I very much
+wish you had left him down at his country home. Between you you have
+created a very serious situation. I must go up to town to-morrow and see
+Manningham. In the meantime, Leslie, I shall leave those reports severely
+alone. We must ignore Mannering altogether."</p>
+
+<p>Berenice turned away with a smile at her lips. She had a very little
+opinion of Lord Redford and his following. Already she saw the man whose
+career they counted finished, at the head of a new and greater party.
+There were plenty of clever men of the coming generation, plenty of room
+for compromises, for the formation of a great national party out of the
+scattered units of a disunited opposition. She believed Mannering strong
+enough to do this. She saw in it greater possibilities than might have
+been forthcoming even if he had been chosen to lead the somewhat ragged
+party represented by Lord Redford and his followers. For the rest, she
+had been very near the success she so desired. Only an accident had
+robbed her of victory. If once they had reached the rose-garden she knew
+that she would have triumphed.</p>
+
+<p>As her maid took off her jewellery that night she smiled at herself in
+the glass. She was thinking of that moment on the terrace. The glow had
+not wholly faded from her face&mdash;she saw herself with her long, slender
+neck and smooth, unwrinkled complexion, still beautiful, still a woman to
+be loved. Her maid ventured to whisper a word of respectful compliment.
+Truly Madame La Duchesse was growing younger!</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>What strange whim, or evil fate, had turned his feet in that direction?
+Mannering often tried to trace backwards the workings of his mind that
+night, but he never wholly succeeded. He reached London about eleven, and
+sent his man home with his luggage, intending merely to call in at the
+club for letters. But afterwards he remembered only that he had strolled
+aimlessly along homewards, thinking deeply, and not particularly careful
+as to his direction. Even then he would have passed the house in Sloane
+Gardens without looking up, but for the civil "Good-night, sir," of a
+coachman sitting on the box of a small brougham drawn up against the
+kerb. He raised his head to return the salute, and realized at once where
+he was. Almost at the same moment the front door opened, and behind a
+glow of light in the hall he saw a familiar figure in the act of passing
+out to her carriage. The street was well lit, and he was almost opposite
+a lamp-post. She recognized him at once.</p>
+
+<p>"Lawrence," she exclaimed, incredulously. "You&mdash;were you coming in?"</p>
+
+<p>She was wrapped from head to foot in a long white opera cloak, but the
+jewels in her hair and at her throat glistened in the flashing light. She
+moved slowly forward to his side. Her maid, who had been coming out to
+open the carriage door, lingered behind.</p>
+
+<p>"I&mdash;upon my word, I scarcely know how I came here," he answered, a little
+bewildered. "I was walking home&mdash;it is scarcely out of my way&mdash;and
+thinking. You are going out?"</p>
+
+<p>She nodded. Looking at her now more closely he saw the shadows under
+her eyes, only imperfectly concealed. The little gesture with which she
+answered him savoured of weariness.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, I was going out. I have sat alone with my thoughts all day, and I
+don't want to end my life in a lunatic asylum. I want a little change,
+that is all. If you will come in and talk to me instead, that will do as
+well. Any sort of distraction, you see," she added, with a hard little
+laugh, "just to keep me from&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>She did not finish her sentence. He looked at her gravely, and from her
+to the waiting carriage. He suddenly realized how the altered condition
+of affairs must affect her.</p>
+
+<p>"I shall have to come and see you in a day or two," he said. "But
+now&mdash;" he hesitated.</p>
+
+<p>"Why not now, then?" she asked.</p>
+
+<p>"You have an engagement," he said.</p>
+
+<p>She shook her head.</p>
+
+<p>"I was only going somewhere to supper. I was going to call for Eva
+Fanesborough, and I suppose we should have had some bridge afterwards.
+Come in instead, Lawrence. I can telephone to her."</p>
+
+<p>Already a presage of evil seemed to be forming itself in his mind. He
+would have given anything to have thought of some valid excuse.</p>
+
+<p>"Your carriage&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Pooh!" she answered. "John, I shall not want you to-night," she said to
+the coachman. "Come!"</p>
+
+<p>She led the way, and Mannering followed. As the maid closed the door
+behind them Mannering felt his breath quicken&mdash;his sense of depression
+grew stronger. He seemed threatened by some new and intangible danger. He
+stood on the hearthrug while she bent over the switch and turned on the
+electric light in the sitting-room. Then she threw off her cloak and
+looked at him curiously for a moment. Her face softened.</p>
+
+<p>"My dear Lawrence," she said, "has politics done this, or are you ill?"</p>
+
+<p>"I am quite well," he answered. "A little tired, perhaps. I have had
+rather a trying day."</p>
+
+<p>She rang the bell, and ordered sandwiches and wine.</p>
+
+<p>"You look like a corpse," she said, and stood over him while he ate and
+drank. And all the time that indefinable fear within him grew. She made
+him smoke. Then she leaned back in an easy-chair and looked across at
+him.</p>
+
+<p>"You had something to say to me. What was it?"</p>
+
+<p>"Nothing good," he answered. "I have quarrelled with my party, and I have
+to resign my seat in the House."</p>
+
+<p>"Already?"</p>
+
+<p>"Already! I am sorry, as of course in a few months' time I should have
+been in office, and drawing a considerable salary. As it is&mdash;" he
+hesitated.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, I understand!" she said. "Well, it doesn't matter much. I only have
+the house for six months furnished, and that's paid for in advance. John
+must go, and the horses can be sold."</p>
+
+<p>He looked at her in amazement. Only a few months ago she had talked very
+differently.</p>
+
+<p>"I&mdash;I am not sure whether all that will be necessary," he said. "I can
+find a tenant for Blakely, and I daresay I can manage another hundred a
+year or so. Only, of course, the large increase we had thought of will
+not be possible now."</p>
+
+<p>"No, I suppose not," she answered, idly.</p>
+
+<p>He moved in his chair uncomfortably. He found her wholly
+incomprehensible.</p>
+
+<p>"What a beast I must have seemed to you always," she exclaimed, suddenly.</p>
+
+<p>"Why?" he asked, pointlessly.</p>
+
+<p>"I've sponged on you all my life, and you're not a rich man, are you,
+Lawrence? Then I dragged you into politics to supply me with the means to
+spend more money. My claim on you was one of sentiment only, but&mdash;I've
+made you pay. No wonder you hate me!"</p>
+
+<p>"Your claim on me, even to every penny I possess," Mannering answered,
+"was a perfectly just one. I have never denied it, and I have done my
+best. And as to hating you, you know quite well it is not true!"</p>
+
+<p>"Ah!" She rose suddenly to her feet, and before he had realized her
+intention she was on her knees by his side. She caught at his hand and
+kept her face hidden from him.</p>
+
+<p>"Lawrence," she cried, "I was mad the other day. It was all the pent-up
+bitterness of years which seemed to escape me so suddenly. I said so much
+that I did not mean to&mdash;I was mad, dear. Oh, Lawrence, I am so lonely!"</p>
+
+<p>Then the fear in his heart became a live thing. He was dumb. He could not
+have spoken had he tried.</p>
+
+<p>"It was your coldness all these years," she murmured. "You were different
+once. You know that. At first, when the horror of what happened was
+young, I thought I understood. I thought, as it wore off, that you would
+be different. The horror has gone now, Lawrence. We know that it was an
+accident, it might as well have been another as you. But you have not
+changed. I have given up hoping. I have tried everything else, and I am a
+very miserable woman. Now I am going to pray to you, Lawrence. You do not
+care for me more. Pretend that you do! You cannot give me your love. Give
+me the best you can. Don't despise me too utterly, Lawrence! Pity me, if
+you will. Heaven knows I need it. And&mdash;you will be a little kind!"</p>
+
+<p>Her hands were clasped about his neck. He disengaged himself gently.</p>
+
+<p>"Blanche!" he cried, hoarsely, "I love another woman!"</p>
+
+<p>"Are you engaged to her?"</p>
+
+<p>"No! Not now!"</p>
+
+<p>"Then what does it matter? What does it matter, anyhow? It is not the
+real thing I am asking you for, Lawrence&mdash;only the make-belief! Keep the
+rest for her, if you must, but give me lies, false looks, hollow
+caresses, anything! You see what depths I have fallen to."</p>
+
+<p>He held her hands tightly. A great pity for her filled his heart&mdash;pity
+for her, and for himself.</p>
+
+<p>"Blanche," he said, "there is one way only. It is for you to decide. Will
+you marry me? I will do my best to make you a good husband!"</p>
+
+<p>"Marry you?" she gasped. "Lawrence, I dare not!"</p>
+
+<p>"I cannot alter the past," he said, sadly. "It never seemed to me
+possible that you could care for my&mdash;after what happened. But&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, it is not that," she interrupted. "There is&mdash;the other woman, and,
+Lawrence, I should be afraid. I am not good enough!"</p>
+
+<p>"Whatever you are, Blanche," he said, gravely, "remember that it is I who
+am responsible for your having been left alone to face the world. Your
+follies belong to me. I am quite free to share their burden with you."</p>
+
+<p>"But the other woman?" she faltered.</p>
+
+<p>"I must love her always," he said, quietly, "but I cannot marry her."</p>
+
+<p>"And you would kiss me sometimes, Lawrence?" she whispered.</p>
+
+<p>He took her quietly into his arms and kissed her forehead.</p>
+
+<p>"I will do my best, Blanche," he said. "I dare not promise any more."</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2>BOOK III</h2>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_Ib" id="CHAPTER_Ib"></a>CHAPTER I</h2>
+
+<h3>MATRIMONY AND AN AWKWARD MEETING</h3>
+
+
+<p>"How delightfully Continental!" Blanche exclaimed, as the head-waiter
+showed them to their table. "Hester, did you ever see anything more
+quaint?"</p>
+
+<p>"It is perfect," the girl answered, leaning back in her chair, and
+looking around with quiet content.</p>
+
+<p>Mannering took up the menu and ordered dinner. Then he lit a cigarette
+and looked around.</p>
+
+<p>"It certainly is quaint," he said. "One dines out of doors often enough,
+especially over here, but I have never seen a courtyard made such
+excellent use of before. The place is really old, too."</p>
+
+<p>They had found their way to a small seaside resort, in the north of
+France, which Mannering had heard highly praised by some casual
+acquaintance. The courtyard of the small hotel was set out with round
+dining tables, and the illumination was afforded by Japanese lanterns
+hung from every available spot. A small band played from a wooden
+balcony. Monsieur, the proprietor, walked anxiously from table to
+table, all smiles and bows. Through the roofed way, which led from the
+street, one caught a distant glimpse of the sea.</p>
+
+<p>Mannering, to the surprise of his friends, and to his own secret
+amazement, had survived the crisis which had seemed at one time likely
+enough to wreck his life. Politically he was no longer a great power, for
+the party whose cause he had half espoused had met with a distinct
+reverse, and he himself was without a seat in Parliament, but amongst the
+masses his was still a name to conjure with. Socially his marriage with
+Blanche Phillimore had scarcely proved the disaster which every one had
+anticipated. Her old ways and manner of life lay in the background. She
+had aged a little, perhaps, and grown thinner, but she had shown from the
+first an almost pathetic desire to adapt her life to his, to assume an
+altogether unobtrusive position, and if she could not in any way
+influence his destiny, at least she did not hamper it. She had made no
+demands upon him which he was not able to grant. She had lived where he
+had suggested, she had never embarrassed him with too vehement an
+affection. As for Mannering himself, he had found solace in work.
+Defeated at the polls, he had declined a safe seat, and remained the
+chosen independent candidate of a great Northern constituency. He
+addressed public meetings occasionally, and he contributed to the
+reviews. Without having ever finally committed himself to a definite
+scheme of tariff reform, he preached everywhere the doctrine of
+consideration. In a modified way he was reckoned now as one of its
+possible supporters.</p>
+
+<p>They were almost halfway through their dinner when some commotion was
+heard in the narrow street outside. Then with much tooting of horns and
+the shrill shouting of directions from the bystanders, two heavily laden
+touring cars turned slowly into the cobbled courtyard, and drew up within
+a few feet of the semicircular line of tables. Mannering's little party
+watched the arrivals with an interest shared by every one in the place.
+Muffled up in cloaks and veils, they were at first unrecognized. It was
+Mannering himself who first realized who they were.</p>
+
+<p>"Clara!" he exclaimed to the young lady who was standing almost by his
+side. "Welcome to Bonestre!"</p>
+
+<p>She turned towards him with a little start.</p>
+
+<p>"Uncle!" she exclaimed. "How extraordinary! Why, how long have you been
+here?"</p>
+
+<p>"We arrived this afternoon," he answered. "You remember Hester, don't
+you? And this is Mrs. Mannering."</p>
+
+<p>Clara shook hands with both. She declared afterwards that she was
+surprised into it, but she would certainly never have recognized in the
+quiet, rather weary-looking, woman who sat at her uncle's side the
+Blanche Phillimore whom she had more than once passionately declared that
+she would sooner die than speak to. She murmured a few mechanical words,
+and then, suddenly realizing the situation, she glanced a little
+anxiously over her shoulder.</p>
+
+<p>"You know who I am with, uncle?" she whispered.</p>
+
+<p>But Mannering was already face to face with Berenice. She held out her
+hand without hesitation. If she felt any emotion she concealed it
+perfectly. Her voice was steady and cordial, if her cheeks were pale. The
+dust lay thickly upon them all. Mannering, tall and grave in his plain
+dinner clothes and black tie, stood almost like a statue before her,
+until her extended hand invited his movement.</p>
+
+<p>"What an extraordinary meeting," she said, quietly. "I am very glad to
+see you again, Mr. Mannering. We have had such a ride, all the way from
+Havre along roads an inch thick in dust. This is your wife, is it not?
+I am very glad to know you, Mrs. Mannering."</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<a href="images/ill1_th.jpg"><img src="images/ill1_th.jpg" alt=""/></a>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>All that might have been embarrassing in the encounter seemed dissolved
+by the utterly conventional tone of her greeting. Sir Leslie Borrowdean
+came up and joined them, and Lord and Lady Redford. Then the little
+party, escorted by the landlord, disappeared into the hotel. Mannering
+resumed his seat and continued his dinner. He leaned over and addressed
+his wife. His tone was kinder than usual.</p>
+
+<p>"When we have had our coffee," he said, "I hope that you will feel like
+a walk. The moon is coming up over the sea."</p>
+
+<p>She shook her head.</p>
+
+<p>"Take Hester," she said. "She loves that sort of thing. I have a
+headache, and I should like to go upstairs as soon as possible."</p>
+
+<p>So Hester walked with Mannering out to the rocks where pools of water,
+left by the tide, shone like silver in the moonlight. They talked very
+little at first, but as they leaned over the rail and looked out seawards
+Hester broke the silence, and spoke of the things which they both had in
+their minds.</p>
+
+<p>"I am sorry they came," she said. "I am afraid it will upset mother, and
+it is not pleasant for you, is it?"</p>
+
+<p>"For me it is nothing, Hester," he answered, "and I hope that your mother
+will not worry about it. They all behaved very nicely, and we need not
+see much of them."</p>
+
+<p>She passed her arm through his.</p>
+
+<p>"Tell me how you feel about it," she begged. "It must seem to you like a
+glimpse of the life you left when&mdash;when you&mdash;married!"</p>
+
+<p>"Hester," he said, earnestly, "don't make any mistake about this. Don't
+let your mother make any mistake. It was my political change of views
+which separated me from all my former friends&mdash;that entirely. To them I
+am an apostate, and a very bad sort of one. I deserted them just when
+they needed me. I did it from convictions which are stronger to-day than
+ever. But none the less I threw them over. I always said that they very
+much exaggerated my importance as a factor in the situation, and my words
+are proved. They carried the elections without any difficulty, and they
+have formed a strong Government. They can afford to be magnanimous to me.
+If I had stayed with them I should have been in office. As it was, I lost
+even my seat."</p>
+
+<p>"You did what you thought was right," she said, softly. "No one can do
+any more!"</p>
+
+<p>Mannering thought over her words as they walked homewards over the
+sand-dunes. Yes, he had done that! Was he satisfied with the result? He
+had become a minor power in politics. Men spoke of him as a weakling&mdash;as
+one who had shrunk from the burden of great responsibility, and left the
+friends who had trusted him in the lurch. And then&mdash;there was the other
+thing. He had paid a great price for this woman's salvation. Had he
+succeeded? She had given up all her old ways. She dressed, she lived, she
+carried herself through life even with a furtive, almost a pathetic,
+attempt to reach his standard. Often he caught her watching him as though
+fearful lest some word or action of hers had been displeasing to him.
+And yet&mdash;he wondered&mdash;was this what she had hoped for? Had he given her
+what she had the right to expect? Had he indeed received value for the
+price he had paid? He asked Hester a sudden question:</p>
+
+<p>"Hester, is your mother happy?"</p>
+
+<p>Hester started a little.</p>
+
+<p>"If she is not," she answered, gravely, "she must be a very ungrateful
+woman."</p>
+
+<p>He left it at that, and together they retraced their steps to the hotel.
+Hester slipped up to her room by a side entrance, but Mannering was
+obliged to pass the table where the new arrivals were lingering over
+their coffee. Clara and Lord Redford both called to him.</p>
+
+<p>"Come and have a smoke with us, Mannering, and tell us all about this
+place," the latter said. "The Duchess and your niece are charmed with it,
+and they want to stay for a few days. Are there any golf links?"</p>
+
+<p>"Come and sit next me, uncle," Clara cried, "and tell me how you like
+being guardian to an heiress. How I have blessed that dear departed aunt
+of mine every day of my life."</p>
+
+<p>Mannering accepted a cigarette, and sat down.</p>
+
+<p>"The golf links are excellent," he said. "As for your aunt, Clara, she
+was a very sensible woman. Her money was so well invested that I have
+practically nothing to do. I expect my duties will commence when the
+young men come!"</p>
+
+<p>"Miss Mannering," Sir Leslie said, gravely, "is not at all attracted by
+young men. She prefers something more staid. I have serious hopes that
+before our little tour is over I shall have persuaded her to marry me!"</p>
+
+<p>"You dear man!" Clara exclaimed. "I only wish you'd give me the chance."</p>
+
+<p>"There's a brazen child to have to chaperon," the Duchess said.
+"Positively asking for a proposal."</p>
+
+<p>"And not in vain," Sir Leslie declared. "Walk down to the sea with me,
+Miss Clara, and I'll propose to you in my most approved fashion. I think
+you said that the investments were sound, Mannering?"</p>
+
+<p>"The investments are all right," Mannering answered, "but I shall have
+nothing to do with fortune-hunters."</p>
+
+<p>"And I a Cabinet Minister!" Sir Leslie declared. "Miss Clara, let us have
+that walk."</p>
+
+<p>"To-morrow night," she promised. "When I get up it will be to go to bed.
+Even your love-making, Sir Leslie, could not keep me awake to-night."</p>
+
+<p>The Duchess rose. The dust was gone, but she was pale, and looked tired.</p>
+
+<p>"Let us leave these men to make plans for us," she said. "I hope we shall
+see something of you to-morrow, Mr. Mannering. Good-night, everybody."</p>
+
+<p>Mannering rose and bowed with the others. For a moment their eyes met.
+Not a muscle of her face changed, and yet Mannering was conscious of a
+sudden wave of emotion. He understood that she had not forgotten!</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_IIb" id="CHAPTER_IIb"></a>CHAPTER II</h2>
+
+<h3>THE SNUB FOR BORROWDEAN</h3>
+
+
+<p>Berenice sat at one of the small round tables in the courtyard, finishing
+her morning coffee. Sir Leslie sat upon the steps by her side. It was one
+of those brilliant mornings in early September, when the sunlight seems
+to find its way everywhere. Even here, surrounded by the pile of worn
+grey stone buildings, which threw shadows everywhere, it had penetrated.
+A long shaft of soft, warm light stretched across the cobbles to their
+feet. Berenice, slim and elegant, fresh as the morning itself, glanced up
+at her companion with a smile.</p>
+
+<p>"Clara," she remarked, "does not like to be kept waiting."</p>
+
+<p>"She is not down yet," he answered, "and there is something I want to say
+to you."</p>
+
+<p>Her delicate eyebrows were a trifle uplifted.</p>
+
+<p>"Do you think that you had better?" she asked.</p>
+
+<p>"I am a man," he said, "and things are known to me which a woman would
+scarcely discover. Do you think that it is quite fair to send Lady
+Redford out motoring with Mrs. Mannering?"</p>
+
+<p>"Why not?"</p>
+
+<p>"Lady Redford is, of course, ignorant of Mrs. Mannering's antecedents.
+What you may do yourself concerns no one. You make your own social laws,
+and you have a right to. But I do not think that even you have a right to
+pass Blanche Phillimore on to your friends, even under the shelter of
+Mannering's name."</p>
+
+<p>Berenice looked at him for several seconds without speaking. Borrowdean
+bit his lip.</p>
+
+<p>"If we were not acquaintances of long standing, Sir Leslie," she said,
+calmly, "I should consider your remarks impertinent. As it is, I choose
+to look upon them as a regrettable mistake. The person, whoever she may
+be, whom the Duchess of Lenchester chooses to receive is usually
+acceptable to her friends. I beg that you will not refer to the subject
+again."</p>
+
+<p>Sir Leslie bowed.</p>
+
+<p>"I have no more to say," he declared. "Knowing naturally a good deal more
+than you concerning the lady in question, I considered it my duty to say
+what I have said."</p>
+
+<p>"It is the sort of duty," Berenice murmured, "which the whole world seems
+to accept always with a relish. One does not expect it so much from your
+sex. Mrs. Mannering was born one of us, and she has had an unhappy life.
+If she has been indiscreet she has her excuses. I choose to whitewash
+her. Do you understand? I pay dearly enough for my social position, and I
+certainly claim its privileges. I recognize Mrs. Mannering, and I require
+my friends to do so."</p>
+
+<p>Sir Leslie rose up.</p>
+
+<p>"You are, if you will forgive my saying so," he remarked, drily, "more
+generous than wise."</p>
+
+<p>"That," she answered, "is my affair. Here comes Clara. Before you start,
+find Mr. Mannering. He is in the hotel somewhere writing letters, and
+tell him that when he has finished I wish to speak to him."</p>
+
+<p>Sir Leslie only bowed. He felt himself opposed by a will as strong as his
+own, and he was too seriously annoyed to trust himself to speech. Clara,
+in her cool white linen dress, came strolling up.</p>
+
+<p>"What have you been doing to Sir Leslie?" she asked, laughing. "He has
+just gone into the hotel with a face like a thunder-cloud."</p>
+
+<p>"I have been giving him a lesson in Christian charity," Berenice
+answered. "He needs it."</p>
+
+<p>Clara nodded. She understood.</p>
+
+<p>"I think you are awfully kind," she said.</p>
+
+<p>Berenice smiled.</p>
+
+<p>"I hate all narrowness," she said, "and if there is a man on God's earth
+who deserves to have people kind to him it is your uncle."</p>
+
+<p>Sir Leslie returned, and he and Clara departed for the golf links.
+Berenice was left alone in the little grey courtyard, fragrant with the
+perfume of scented shrubs and blossoming plants, filled too, with the
+warm sunlight, which seemed to find its way into every corner. She sat at
+her little table, paler than a few moments ago, her teeth clenched, her
+white fingers clasped together. Underneath her muslin blouse her heart
+had suddenly commenced to beat fiercely&mdash;a sense of excitement, long
+absent, was stealing through her veins. The bonds which a year's studied
+self-repression had forged were snapped apart. She knew now what it
+meant, the great inexpressible thing, the one eternal emotion which has
+come throbbing down the world from the days when poets sung their first
+song and painters flung truth on to canvas. She was a woman like the
+others, and she loved. Her unique position in society, her carefully
+studied life, her lofty ambitions, were like vain things crumbling into
+dust before her eyes. A year of cold misery seemed atoned for by the
+simple fact that within a few yards of her he sat writing&mdash;that within a
+few minutes he would be by her side. Of the future she scarcely thought.
+Hers was the woman's love, content with small things. Its passion was of
+the soul, and its song was self-sacrifice. But if she had known&mdash;if she
+had only known!</p>
+
+<p>He came out to her soon. His manner was quiet and a little grave.
+Self-control came easier to him because the truth had been with him
+longer. Nevertheless, he was not wholly at his ease.</p>
+
+<p>"You know what has happened?" she asked, smiling. "The Redfords have
+taken Mrs. Mannering and her daughter motoring, and Sir Leslie and Clara
+have gone to the golf links. You and I are left to entertain one
+another."</p>
+
+<p>"What would you like to do?" he asked, simply.</p>
+
+<p>"I should like to walk," she answered, "down by the sea somewhere. I am
+ready now."</p>
+
+<p>They made their way through the little town, along the promenade and on
+to the sands beyond. Then a climb, and they found themselves in a thick
+wood stretching back inland from the sea. She pointed to a fallen trunk.</p>
+
+<p>"Let us sit down," she said. "There are so many things I want to ask
+you."</p>
+
+<p>On the way they had spoken only of indifferent matters, yet from the
+first Mannering had felt the presence of a subtle something in her
+deportment towards him, for which he could find no explanation. He
+himself was feeling the tension of this meeting. He had expected to find
+her so different. Gracious, perhaps, because she was a great lady, but
+certainly without any of these suggestions of something kept back, which
+continually, without any sort of direct expression, made themselves felt.
+And when they sat down she said nothing. He had the feeling that it was
+because she dared not trust herself to speak. Surprise and agitation kept
+him, too, silent.</p>
+
+<p>At last she spoke. Her voice was not very steady, and she avoided looking
+at him.</p>
+
+<p>"I should like," she said, "to have you tell me about yourself&mdash;about
+your life&mdash;and your work."</p>
+
+<p>"It is told in a few words," he answered. "Somewhere, somehow, I have
+failed! I could not adopt the Birmingham programme, I could not oppose
+it. You know what isolation means politically?&mdash;abuse from one side and
+contempt from the other. That is what I am experiencing. The working
+classes have some faith in me, I believe. My work, such as it is, is
+solely for them. I suppose the papers tell the truth when they say that
+mine is a ruined career&mdash;only, you see, I am trying to do the best I can
+with the pieces."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," she said, softly, "that is something. To do the best one can with
+the pieces. We all might try to do that."</p>
+
+<p>He smiled.</p>
+
+<p>"You, at least, have no need to consider such a thing," he said. "So far
+as any woman can be preeminent in politics you have succeeded in becoming
+so. I saw that a lady's paper a few weeks ago said that your influence
+outside the Cabinet was more powerful than any one man's within it."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," she said, calmly, "the papers talk like that. It gives their
+readers something to laugh at! I wonder what you would say, my friend, if
+I told you that I, too, am engaged in that same thankless task. I, too,
+am striving to do the best I can with the pieces."</p>
+
+<p>"You are not serious!" he protested.</p>
+
+<p>"I am very serious indeed," she declared. "Shall I tell you more? Shall
+I tell you when I made my mistake?"</p>
+
+<p>"No!" he cried, hoarsely.</p>
+
+<p>"But I shall," she continued, suddenly gripping his arm. "I meant to tell
+you. I brought you here to tell you. I made my mistake when I let Leslie
+Borrowdean take you back to Lord Redford just as we were entering the
+rose-garden at Bayleigh. Do you remember? I made my mistake when I
+suffered anything in this great world to come between me and a woman's
+only chance of happiness! I made my mistake when I was too proud to tell
+you that I loved you, and that nothing else in the world mattered. There!
+You tried me hard! You know that! But my mistake was none the less fatal.
+I ought to have held fast by you, and I let you go. And I shall suffer
+for it all my days."</p>
+
+<p>"You cared like that?" he cried.</p>
+
+<p>"Worse!" she answered, turning her flushed face towards him. "I care now.
+Kiss me, Lawrence!"</p>
+
+<p>He held her in his arms. Time stood still until she stole away with an
+odd little laugh.</p>
+
+<p>"There," she said, "I have vindicated myself. No one can ever call me a
+proud woman again. And you know the truth! I might have had you all to
+myself and I let you go. Now I am going to do the best I can with the
+pieces. The half of you I want belongs to your wife. I must be content
+with the other half. I suppose I may have that?"</p>
+
+<p>"But your friends&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Bosh! My friends and your wife must make the best of it. I shan't rob
+her again as I did just now. You can blot that out&mdash;antedate it. It
+belonged to the past. But I am not going through life as I have gone
+through this last year, longing for a sight of you, longing to hear you
+speak, and denying myself just because you are married. Live with your
+wife, Lawrence, and make her as happy as you can, but remember that you
+owe me a great deal, too, and you must do your best to pay it. Don't look
+at me as though I were talking nonsense."</p>
+
+<p>He held her hand. She placed it in his unresistingly. All the lines in
+his face seemed smoothed out. The fire of youth was in his eyes.</p>
+
+<p>"Do you wonder that I am surprised?" he asked. "All this year you have
+made no sign. All the time I have been schooling myself to forget you."</p>
+
+<p>"Don't dare to tell me that you have succeeded!" she exclaimed.</p>
+
+<p>"Not an iota!" he answered. "It was the most miserable failure of my
+life."</p>
+
+<p>She smiled upon him delightfully, and gently withdrew her hand.</p>
+
+<p>"Lawrence," she said, "I am going to talk to you seriously for one
+minute. You are too conscientious for a politician. Don't let the same
+vice spoil our friendship! Certain things you owe to your wife. Mind,
+I admit that, though from some points of view even that might be
+disputed. But you also owe me certain things&mdash;and I mean to be paid.
+I won't be avoided, mind. I want to be treated as a very close&mdash;and
+dear&mdash;companion&mdash;and&mdash;kiss me once more, Lawrence, and then we'll begin,"
+she wound up, with a little sob in her throat.</p>
+
+<p>An hour later the whole party had <i>d&eacute;jeuner</i> together in the courtyard of
+the little hotel. The Duchess was noticeably kind to Mrs. Mannering, and
+she snubbed Sir Leslie. Clara looked on a little gravely. The situation
+contained many elements of interest.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_IIIb" id="CHAPTER_IIIb"></a>CHAPTER III</h2>
+
+<h3>CLOUDS&mdash;AND A CALL TO ARMS</h3>
+
+
+<p>The first cloud appeared towards the end of the third day at Bonestre.
+Blanche and Sir Leslie were left alone, and he hastened to improve the
+opportunity.</p>
+
+<p>"The Duchess and your husband," he remarked, "appear very easily to have
+picked up again the threads of their old friendship."</p>
+
+<p>"The Duchess," she answered, "is a very charming woman. I am sure that
+you find her so, don't you?"</p>
+
+<p>"We are very old friends," he answered, "but I was never admitted to
+exactly the same privileges as your husband enjoys."</p>
+
+<p>"The Duchess," she answered, calmly, "is a woman of taste!"</p>
+
+<p>Sir Leslie muttered something under his breath. Blanche made a movement
+as though to take up again the book which she had been reading in a
+sheltered corner of the hotel garden.</p>
+
+<p>"Don't you think," he said, "that we should make better friends than
+enemies?"</p>
+
+<p>"I am not at all sure," she answered, calmly. "To tell you the truth,
+I don't fancy you particularly in either capacity."</p>
+
+<p>He laughed unpleasantly.</p>
+
+<p>"You are scarcely complimentary," he remarked.</p>
+
+<p>"I did not mean to be," she answered. "Why should I?"</p>
+
+<p>"You are content, then, to let your husband drift back into his old
+relations with the Duchess? I presume that you know what they were?"</p>
+
+<p>"Whether I am or not," she answered, "what business is it of yours?"</p>
+
+<p>"I will tell you, if you like," he answered. "In fact, I think it would
+be better. It has been the one desire of my life to marry the Duchess of
+Lenchester myself."</p>
+
+<p>She smiled at him scornfully.</p>
+
+<p>"Come," she said, "let me give you a little advice. Give up the idea.
+They say that lookers-on see most of the game, and so far as I am
+concerned I'm certainly the looker-on of this party. The Duchess doesn't
+care a row of pins about you!"</p>
+
+<p>"There are other marriages, besides marriages of affection," Sir Leslie
+said, stiffly. "The Duchess is ambitious."</p>
+
+<p>"But she is also a woman," Blanche declared. "And she is in love."</p>
+
+<p>"With whom?"</p>
+
+<p>"With my husband! I presume that is clear enough to most people!"</p>
+
+<p>Sir Leslie was a little staggered.</p>
+
+<p>"You take it very coolly," he remarked.</p>
+
+<p>"Why not? The Duchess is too proud a woman to give herself away, and my
+husband&mdash;belongs to me!"</p>
+
+<p>"You haven't any idea of taking poison, or anything of that sort, I
+suppose, have you?" he inquired. "The other woman nearly always does
+that."</p>
+
+<p>"Not in real life," Blanche answered, composedly. "Besides, I'm not the
+other woman&mdash;I'm the one. The Duchess is the other!"</p>
+
+<p>"But your husband&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Do you know, I should prefer not to discuss my husband&mdash;with you,"
+Blanche said, calmly, taking up her book. "He is not the sort of man you
+would be at all likely to understand. If you want a rich wife why don't
+you propose to Clara Mannering? I suppose you knew that some unheard-of
+aunt had left her fifty thousand pounds?"</p>
+
+<p>Sir Leslie rose to his feet.</p>
+
+<p>"I don't fancy that you and I are very sympathetic this afternoon," he
+remarked. "I will go and see if any one has returned."</p>
+
+<p>"Do," she answered. "I shall miss you, of course, but my book is
+positively absorbing, and I am dying to go on with it."</p>
+
+<p>Sir Leslie left the garden without another word. Blanche held her book
+before her face until he had disappeared. Then it slipped from her
+fingers. She looked hard into a cluster of roses, and she saw only two
+figures&mdash;always the same figures. Her eyes were set, her face was wan and
+old.</p>
+
+<p>"The other woman!" she murmured to herself. "That is what I am. And
+I can't live up to it. I ought to take poison, or get run over or
+something, and I know very well I shan't. Bother the man! Why couldn't
+he leave me alone?"</p>
+
+<p>After dinner that evening she accepted her husband's nightly invitation
+and walked with him for a little while. The others followed.</p>
+
+<p>"How much longer can you stay away from England, Lawrence?" she asked
+him.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh&mdash;a fortnight, I should think," he answered. "I am not tied to any
+particular date. You like it here, I hope?"</p>
+
+<p>"Immensely! Are&mdash;our friends going to remain?"</p>
+
+<p>"I haven't heard them say anything about moving on yet," he answered.</p>
+
+<p>"Are you in love with the Duchess still, Lawrence?"</p>
+
+<p>"Am I&mdash;Blanche!"</p>
+
+<p>"Don't be angry! You made a mistake once, you know. Don't make another.
+I'm not a jealous woman, and I don't ask much from you, but I'm your
+wife. That's all!"</p>
+
+<p>She turned and called to Hester. The little party rearranged itself.
+Mannering found himself with Berenice.</p>
+
+<p>"What was your wife saying to you?" she asked.</p>
+
+<p>He shrugged his shoulders.</p>
+
+<p>"It was the beginning," he remarked.</p>
+
+<p>Berenice sighed.</p>
+
+<p>"It is a strange thing," she said, "but in this world no one can ever be
+happy except at some one else's expense. It is a most unnatural law of
+compensation. Shall we move on to-morrow?"</p>
+
+<p>"The day after," he pleaded. "To-morrow we are going to Berneval."</p>
+
+<p>She nodded.</p>
+
+<p>"We are queer people, I think," she said. "I have been perfectly
+satisfied this week simply to be with you. When it comes to an end
+I should like it to come suddenly."</p>
+
+<p>He thought of her words an hour later, when on his return to the hotel
+they handed him a telegram. He passed it on at once to Lord Redford, and
+glanced at his watch.</p>
+
+<p>"Poor Cunningham," he said, "it was a short triumph for him. I must go
+back to-night, or the first train to-morrow morning. The sitting member
+for my division of Leeds died suddenly last night, Blanche," he said to
+his wife. "I must be on the spot at once."</p>
+
+<p>She rose to her feet.</p>
+
+<p>"I will go and pack," she said.</p>
+
+<p>Lady Redford followed her very soon. Clara and Sir Leslie had not yet
+returned from their stroll. Lord Redford remained alone with them.</p>
+
+<p>"I scarcely know what sort of fortune to wish you, Mannering," he said.
+"Perhaps your first speech will tell us."</p>
+
+<p>Berenice leaned back in her chair.</p>
+
+<p>"I can't imagine you as a labour member in the least," she remarked.</p>
+
+<p>"Doesn't this force your hand a little, Mannering?" Lord Redford said. "I
+understand that you were anxious to avoid a direct pronouncement upon the
+fiscal policy for the present."</p>
+
+<p>Mannering nodded gravely.</p>
+
+<p>"It is quite time I made up my mind," he said. "I shall do so now."</p>
+
+<p>"May we find ourselves in the same lobby!" Lord Redford said. "I will go
+and find my man. He may as well take you to the station in the car."</p>
+
+<p>Berenice smiled at Mannering luminously through the shadowy lights.</p>
+
+<p>"Dear friend," she said, "I am delighted that you are going. Our
+little time here has been delightful, but we had reached its limit.
+I like to think that you are going back into the thick of it. Don't be
+faint-hearted, Lawrence. Don't lose faith in yourself. You have chosen
+a terribly lonely path; if any man can find his way to the top, you can.
+And don't dare to forget me, sir!"</p>
+
+<p>He caught her cheerful tone.</p>
+
+<p>"You are inspiring," he declared. "Thank heaven, I have a twelve hours'
+journey before me. I need time for thought, if ever a man did."</p>
+
+<p>"Don't worry about it," she answered, lightly. "The truth is somewhere in
+your brain, I suppose, and when the time comes you will find it. Much
+better think about your sandwiches."</p>
+
+<p>The car backed into the yard. Blanche reappeared, and behind her
+Mannering's bag.</p>
+
+<p>"I do hope that Hester and I have packed everything," she said. "We could
+come over to-morrow, if there's anything you want us for. If not we shall
+stay here for another week. Good-bye!"</p>
+
+<p>She calmly held up her lips, and Mannering kissed them after a moment's
+hesitation. She remained by his side even when he turned to say farewell
+to Berenice.</p>
+
+<p>"I am sure you ought to be going," she said calmly. "I will send on your
+letters if there are any to-morrow. Wire your address as soon as you
+arrive. Good luck!"</p>
+
+<p>The car glided away. They all stood in a group to see him go, and waved
+indiscriminate farewells. Blanche moved a little apart as the car
+disappeared, and Berenice watched her curiously. She was rubbing her lips
+with her handkerchief.</p>
+
+<p>"A sting!" she remarked, becoming suddenly aware of the other's scrutiny.
+"Nothing that hurts very much!"</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_IVb" id="CHAPTER_IVb"></a>CHAPTER IV</h2>
+
+<h3>DISASTER</h3>
+
+
+<p>Mannering, in his sitting-room at last, locked the door and drew a long
+breath of relief. Upon his ear-drums there throbbed still the yells of
+his enthusiastic but noisy adherents&mdash;the truculent cries of those who
+had heard his great speech with satisfaction, of those who saw pass from
+amongst themselves to a newer school of thought one whom they had
+regarded as their natural leader. It was over at last. He had made his
+pronouncement. To some it might seem a compromise. To himself it was the
+only logical outcome of his long period of thought. He spoke for the
+workingman. He demanded inquiry, consideration, experiment. He demanded
+them in a way of his own, at once novel and convincing. Many of the most
+brilliant articles which had ever come from his pen he abjured. He drew
+a sharp line between the province of the student and the duty of the
+politician.</p>
+
+<p>And now he was alone at last, free to think and dream, free to think of
+Bonestre, to wonder what reports of his meeting would reach the little
+French watering-place, and how they would be received. He could see
+Berenice reading the morning paper in the little grey courtyard, with the
+pigeons flying above her head and the sunlight streaming across the
+flags. He could hear Borrowdean's sneer, could see Lord Redford's shrug
+of the shoulders. There is little sympathy in the world for the man who
+dares to change his mind.</p>
+
+<p>There was a knock at the door, and his servant entered with a tray.</p>
+
+<p>"I have brought the whiskey and soda, sandwiches and cigarettes, sir," he
+announced. "I am sorry to say that there is a person outside whom I
+cannot get rid of. His name is Fardell, and he insists upon it that his
+business is of importance."</p>
+
+<p>Mannering smiled.</p>
+
+<p>"You can show him up at once," he ordered; "now, and whenever he calls."</p>
+
+<p>Fardell appeared almost directly. Mannering had seen him before during
+the day, but noticed at once a change in him. He was pale, and looked
+like a man who had received some sort of a shock.</p>
+
+<p>"Come in, Fardell, and sit down," Mannering said. "You look tired. Have a
+drink."</p>
+
+<p>Fardell walked straight to the tray and helped himself to some neat
+whiskey.</p>
+
+<p>"Thank you, sir," he said. "I&mdash;I've had rather a knockout blow."</p>
+
+<p>He emptied the tumbler and set it down.</p>
+
+<p>"Mr. Mannering, sir," he said, "I've just heard a man bet twenty to one
+in crisp five-pound bank-notes that you never sit for West Leeds."</p>
+
+<p>"Was he drunk or sober?" Mannering asked.</p>
+
+<p>"Sober as a judge!"</p>
+
+<p>Mannering smiled.</p>
+
+<p>"How often did you take him?" he asked.</p>
+
+<p>"Not once! I didn't dare!"</p>
+
+<p>Mannering, who had been in the act of helping himself to a whiskey and
+soda, looked around with the decanter in his hand.</p>
+
+<p>"I don't understand you," he said, bewildered. "You know very well that
+the chances, so far as they can be reckoned up, are slightly in my
+favour."</p>
+
+<p>"They were!" Fardell answered. "Heaven knows what they are now."</p>
+
+<p>Mannering was a little annoyed. It seemed to him that Fardell must have
+been drinking.</p>
+
+<p>"Do you mind explaining yourself?" he asked.</p>
+
+<p>"I can do so," Fardell answered. "I must do so. But while I am about it
+I want you to put on your hat and come with me."</p>
+
+<p>Mannering laughed shortly.</p>
+
+<p>"What, to-night?" he exclaimed. "No, thank you. Be reasonable, Fardell.
+I've had my day's work, and I think I've earned a little rest. To be
+frank with you, I don't like mysteries. If you've anything to say, out
+with it."</p>
+
+<p>"Right!" Richard Fardell answered. "I am going to ask you a question,
+Mr. Mannering. Go back a good many years, as many years as you like.
+Is there anything in your life as a younger man, say when you first
+entered Parliament, which&mdash;if it were brought up against you now&mdash;might
+be&mdash;embarrassing?"</p>
+
+<p>Mannering did not answer for several moments. He was already pale and
+tired, but he felt what little colour remained leave his face. Least of
+all he had expected this. Even now&mdash;what could the man mean? What could
+be known?</p>
+
+<p>"I am not sure that I understand you," he said. "There is nothing that
+could be known! I am sure of that."</p>
+
+<p>"There is a person," Fardell said, slowly, "who has made extraordinary
+statements. Our opponents have got hold of him. The substance of them is
+this: He says that many years ago you were the lover of a married woman,
+that you sold her husband worthless shares and ruined him, and that
+finally&mdash;in a quarrel&mdash;he declares that he was an eye-witness of
+this&mdash;that you killed him."</p>
+
+<p>Mannering slowly subsided into his chair. His cheeks were blanched.
+Richard Fardell watched him with feverish anxiety.</p>
+
+<p>"It is a lie," Mannering declared. "There is no man living who can say
+this."</p>
+
+<p>"The man says," Fardell continued, stonily, "that his name is Parkins,
+and that he was butler to Mr. Stephen Phillimore eleven years ago."</p>
+
+<p>"Parkins is dead!" Mannering said, hoarsely. "He has been dead for many
+years."</p>
+
+<p>"He is living in Leeds to-day," Fardell answered. "A journalist from the
+<i>Yorkshire Herald</i> was with him for two hours this afternoon."</p>
+
+<p>"Blanche&mdash;I was told that he was dead," Mannering said.</p>
+
+<p>"Then the story is true?" Fardell asked.</p>
+
+<p>"Not as you have told it," Mannering answered.</p>
+
+<p>"There is truth in it?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes."</p>
+
+<p>Richard Fardell was silent for several moments. He paced up and down the
+room, his hands behind his back, his eyebrows contracted into a heavy
+frown. For him it was a bitter moment. He was only a half-educated,
+illiterate man, possessed of sturdy common sense and a wonderful tenacity
+of purpose. He had permitted himself to indulge in a little silent but
+none the less absolute hero-worship, and Mannering had been the hero.</p>
+
+<p>"You must come with me at once and see this man," he said at last. "He
+has not yet signed his statement. We must do what we can to keep him
+quiet."</p>
+
+<p>Mannering took up his coat and hat without a word. They left the hotel,
+and Fardell summoned a cab.</p>
+
+<p>"It is a long way," he explained. "We will drive part of the distance and
+walk the rest. We may be watched already."</p>
+
+<p>Mannering nodded. The last blow was so unexpected that he felt in a sense
+numbed. His speech only a few hours ago had made large inroads upon his
+powers of endurance. His partial recantation had cost him many hours of
+torture, from which he was still suffering. And now, without the
+slightest warning, he found himself face to face with a crisis far
+graver, far more acute. Never in his most gloomy moments had he felt any
+real fear of a resurrection of the past such as that with which he was
+now threatened. It was a thunderbolt from a clear sky. Even now he found
+it hard to persuade himself that he was not dreaming.</p>
+
+<p>They were in the cab for nearly half an hour before Fardell stopped and
+dismissed it. Then they walked up and down and across streets of small
+houses, pitiless in their monotony, squalid and depressing in their
+ugliness.</p>
+
+<p>Finally Fardell stopped, and without hesitation knocked at the door of
+one of them. It was opened by a man in shirt-sleeves, holding a tallow
+candle in his hand.</p>
+
+<p>"What yer want?" he inquired, suspiciously.</p>
+
+<p>"Your lodger," Fardell answered, pushing past him and drawing Mannering
+into the room. "Where is he?"</p>
+
+<p>The man jerked his thumb upwards.</p>
+
+<p>"Where he won't be long," he answered, shortly. "The likes of 'im having
+visitors, and one a toff, too. Say, are yer going to pay his rent?"</p>
+
+<p>"We may do that," Fardell answered. "Is he upstairs?"</p>
+
+<p>"Ay!" the man answered, shuffling away. "Pay 'is rent, and yer can chuck
+'im out of the winder, if yer like!"</p>
+
+<p>They climbed the crazy staircase. Fardell opened the door of the room
+above without even the formality of knocking. An old man sat there,
+bending over a table, half dressed. Before him were several sheets of
+paper.</p>
+
+<p>"I believe we're in time," Fardell muttered, half to himself. "Parkins,
+is that you?" he asked, in a louder tone.</p>
+
+<p>The old man looked up and blinked at them. He shaded his eyes with one
+hand. The other he laid flat upon the papers before him. He was old,
+blear-eyed, unkempt.</p>
+
+<p>"Is that Master Ronaldson?" he asked, in a thin, quavering tone. "I've
+signed 'em, sir. Have yer brought the money? I'm a poor old man, and I
+need a drop of something now and then to keep the life in me. If yer'll
+just hand over a trifle I'll send out for&mdash;eh&mdash;eh, my landlord, he's a
+kindly man&mdash;he'll fetch it. Eh? Two of yer! I don't see so well as I
+did. Is that you, Mr. Ronaldson, sir?"</p>
+
+<p>Fardell threw some silver coins upon the table. The old man snatched them
+up eagerly.</p>
+
+<p>"It's not Mr. Ronaldson," he said, "but I daresay we shall do as well. We
+want to talk to you about those papers there."</p>
+
+<p>The old man nodded. He was gazing at the silver in his hand.</p>
+
+<p>"I've writ it all out," he muttered. "I told 'un I would. A pound a week
+for ten years. That's what I 'ad! And then it stopped! Did she mean me to
+starve, eh? Not I! John Parkins knows better nor that. I've writ it all
+out, and there's my signature. It's gospel truth, too."</p>
+
+<p>"We are going to buy the truth from you," Fardell said. "We have more
+money than Ronaldson. Don't be afraid. We have gold to spare where
+Ronaldson had silver."</p>
+
+<p>The old man lifted the candle with shaking fingers. Then it dropped with
+a crash to the ground, and lay there for a moment spluttering. He shrank
+back.</p>
+
+<p>"It's 'im!" he muttered. "Don't kill me, sir. I mean you no harm. It's
+Mr. Mannering!"</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_Vb" id="CHAPTER_Vb"></a>CHAPTER V</h2>
+
+<h3>THE JOURNALIST INTERVENES</h3>
+
+
+<p>The old man had sunk into a seat. His face and hands were twitching with
+fear. His eyes, as though fascinated, remained fixed upon Mannering's.
+All the while he mumbled to himself. Fardell drew Mannering a little on
+one side.</p>
+
+<p>"What can we do with him?" he asked. "We might tear up those sheets, give
+him money, keep him soddened with drink. And even then he'd give the
+whole show away the moment any one got at him. It isn't so bad as he
+makes out, I suppose?"</p>
+
+<p>"It is not so bad as that," Mannering answered, "but it is bad enough."</p>
+
+<p>"What became of the woman?" Fardell asked. "Parkins's mistress, I mean?"</p>
+
+<p>"She is my wife," Mannering answered.</p>
+
+<p>Fardell threw out his hands with a little gesture of despair.</p>
+
+<p>"We must get him away from here," he said. "If Polden gets hold of him
+you might as well resign at once. It is dangerous for you to stay. He was
+evidently expecting that fellow Ronaldson to-night."</p>
+
+<p>Mannering nodded.</p>
+
+<p>"What shall you do with him?" he asked.</p>
+
+<p>"Hide him if I can," Fardell answered, grimly. "If I can get him out of
+this place, it ought not to be impossible. The most important thing at
+present is for you to get away without being recognized."</p>
+
+<p>Mannering took up his hat.</p>
+
+<p>"I will go," he said. "I shall leave the cab for you. I can find my way
+back to the hotel."</p>
+
+<p>Fardell nodded.</p>
+
+<p>"It would be better," he said. "Turn your coat-collar up and draw your
+hat down over your eyes. You mustn't be recognized down here. It's a
+pretty low part."</p>
+
+<p>Nevertheless, Mannering had not reached the corner of the street before
+he heard hasty footsteps behind him, and felt a light touch upon his
+shoulder. He turned sharply round.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, sir!" he exclaimed, "what do you want with me?"</p>
+
+<p>The newcomer was a tall, thin young man, wearing glasses, and although he
+was a complete stranger to Mannering, he knew at once who he was.</p>
+
+<p>"Mr. Mannering, I believe?" he said, quickly.</p>
+
+<p>"What has my name to do with you, sir?" Mannering answered, coldly.</p>
+
+<p>"Mine is Ronaldson," the young man answered. "I am a reporter."</p>
+
+<p>Mannering regarded him steadily for a moment.</p>
+
+<p>"You are the young man, then," he said, "who has discovered the mare's
+nest of my iniquity."</p>
+
+<p>"If it is a mare's nest," the young man answered, briskly, "I shall be
+quite as much relieved as disappointed. But your being down here doesn't
+look very much like that, does it?"</p>
+
+<p>"No man," Mannering answered, "hears that a bomb is going to be thrown at
+him without a certain amount of curiosity as to its nature. I have been
+down to examine the bomb. Frankly, I don't think much of it."</p>
+
+<p>"You are prepared, then, to deny this man Parkins's story?" the reporter
+asked.</p>
+
+<p>"I am prepared to have a shot at your paper for libel, anyhow, if you use
+it," Mannering answered.</p>
+
+<p>"Do you know the substance of his communication?"</p>
+
+<p>"I can make a pretty good guess at it," Mannering answered.</p>
+
+<p>"You really mean to deny it, then?" the reporter asked.</p>
+
+<p>"Assuredly, for it is not true," Mannering answered. "Pray don't let me
+detain you any longer!"</p>
+
+<p>He turned on his heel and walked away, but the reporter kept pace with
+him.</p>
+
+<p>"You will pardon me, but this is a very serious affair, Mr. Mannering,"
+he said. "Serious for both of us. Do you mind discussing it with me?"</p>
+
+<p>"Not in the least," Mannering answered, "so long as you permit me to
+continue my way homewards."</p>
+
+<p>"I will walk with you, sir, if you don't mind," the reporter said. "It is
+a very serious matter indeed, this! My people are as keen as possible to
+make use of it. If they do, and it turns out a true story, you, of
+course, will never sit for Leeds. And if on the other hand it is false,
+I shall get the sack!"</p>
+
+<p>"Well, it is false," Mannering said.</p>
+
+<p>"Some parts of it, perhaps," the young man answered, smoothly. "Not all,
+Mr. Mannering."</p>
+
+<p>"Old men are garrulous," Mannering remarked. "I expect you will find that
+your friend has been letting his tongue run away with him."</p>
+
+<p>"He has committed his statements to paper," Ronaldson remarked.</p>
+
+<p>"And signed them?"</p>
+
+<p>"He is willing to do so," the reporter answered. "I was to have fetched
+them away to-night."</p>
+
+<p>"You may be a little late," Mannering remarked.</p>
+
+<p>The <i>double entente</i> in his tone did not escape Ronaldson's notice. He
+stopped short on the pavement.</p>
+
+<p>"So you have bought him," he remarked.</p>
+
+<p>Mannering glanced at him superciliously.</p>
+
+<p>"Will you pardon me," he said, "if I remark that this conversation has no
+particular interest for me? Don't let me bring you any further out of
+your way."</p>
+
+<p>Ronaldson took off his hat.</p>
+
+<p>"Very good, sir," he remarked. "I will wish you good-night!"</p>
+
+<p>Mannering pursued his way homeward with the briefest of farewells. The
+young reporter retraced his steps. Arrived at Parkins's lodgings he
+mounted the stairs, and found the room empty. He returned and interviewed
+the landlord. From him he only learned that Parkins had departed with one
+of two gentlemen who had come to see him that evening, and that they had
+paid his rent for him. The reporter was obliged to depart with no more
+satisfactory information. But next morning, before nine o'clock, he was
+waiting to see Mannering, and would not be denied. He was accompanied,
+too, by a person of no less importance than the editor of the <i>Yorkshire
+Herald</i> himself.</p>
+
+<p>Mannering kept them waiting an hour, and then received them coolly.</p>
+
+<p>"I am glad to see you, Mr. Polden," he said, glancing at the editor's
+card. "I have already had some conversation with our young friend there,"
+he added, glancing towards the reporter. "What can I have the pleasure of
+doing for you?"</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Polden produced a sheet of proofs from his pocket. He passed them
+over to Mannering.</p>
+
+<p>"I should like you to examine these, sir," he said.</p>
+
+<p>"In type already!" Mannering remarked, calmly.</p>
+
+<p>"In proof for our evening's issue," Polden answered.</p>
+
+<p>Mannering read them through.</p>
+
+<p>"It will cost you several thousand pounds!" he said.</p>
+
+<p>"Then the money will be well spent," Polden answered. "No one has a
+higher regard for you politically than I have, Mr. Mannering, but we
+don't want you as member for West Leeds. That's all!"</p>
+
+<p>"It happens," Mannering said, "that I am particularly anxious to sit for
+West Leeds."</p>
+
+<p>"You will go on&mdash;in the face of this?" the editor asked Mannering.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, and with the suit for libel which will follow," Mannering answered.</p>
+
+<p>The editor shrugged his shoulders.</p>
+
+<p>"Do me the favour to believe, Mr. Mannering," he said, "that we have not
+gone into this matter blindfold. We had a preliminary intimation as to
+this affair from a person whose word carries considerable weight, and our
+investigations have been searching. I will admit that the disappearance
+of the man Parkins is a little awkward for us, but we have ample
+justification in publishing his story."</p>
+
+<p>"I trust for your sakes that the law courts will support your views,"
+Mannering said, coldly. "I scarcely think it likely."</p>
+
+<p>"Mr. Mannering," Polden said, "I quite appreciate your attitude, but do
+you really think it is a wise one? I very much regret that it should have
+been our duty to unearth this unsavoury story, and having unearthed it,
+to use it. But you must remember that the issue on hand is a great one. I
+belong to the Liberal party and the absolute Free Traders, and I consider
+that for this city to be represented by any one who shows the least
+indication of being unsafe upon this question would be a national
+disaster and a local disgrace. I want you to understand, therefore, that
+I am not playing a game of bluff. The proofs you hold in your hand have
+been set and corrected. Within a few hours the story will stand out in
+black and white. Are you prepared for this?"</p>
+
+<p>Mannering shrugged his shoulders.</p>
+
+<p>"I am not prepared to resign my candidature, if that is what you mean,"
+he said. "I presume that nothing short of that will satisfy you?"</p>
+
+<p>"Nothing," the editor answered, firmly.</p>
+
+<p>"Then there remains nothing more," Mannering remarked, coldly, "than for
+me to wish you a very good-morning."</p>
+
+<p>"I am sorry," Mr. Polden said. "I trust you will believe, Mr. Mannering,
+that I find this a very unpleasant duty."</p>
+
+<p>Mannering made no answer save a slight bow. He held open the door, and
+Mr. Polden and his satellite passed out. Afterwards he strolled to the
+window and looked down idly upon the crowd.</p>
+
+<p>"If I act in accordance with the conventions," he murmured to himself, "I
+suppose I ought to take, a glass of poison, or blow my brains out.
+Instead of which&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>He shrugged his shoulders, and rang for his hat and coat. He was due at
+one of the great foundries in half an hour to speak to the men during
+their luncheon interval.</p>
+
+<p>"Instead of which," he muttered, as he lit a cigarette, "I shall go on to
+the end."</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_VIb" id="CHAPTER_VIb"></a>CHAPTER VI</h2>
+
+<h3>TREACHERY AND A TELEGRAM</h3>
+
+
+<p>The sunlight streamed down into the little grey courtyard of the <i>Leon
+D'or</i> at Bonestre. Sir Leslie Borrowdean, in an immaculate grey suit, and
+with a carefully chosen pink carnation in his button-hole, sat alone at a
+small table having his morning coffee. His attention was divided between
+a copy of the <i>Figaro</i> and a little pile of letters and telegrams on the
+other side of his plate. More than once he glanced at the topmost of the
+latter and smiled.</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Mannering and Hester came down the grey stone steps and crossed
+towards their own table. The former lingered for a moment as she passed
+Sir Leslie, who rose to greet the two women.</p>
+
+<p>"Another glorious day!" he remarked. "What news from Leeds?"</p>
+
+<p>"None," she said. "My husband seldom writes."</p>
+
+<p>Sir Leslie smiled reflectively, and glanced towards the pile of papers at
+his side.</p>
+
+<p>"Perhaps," she remarked, "you know better than I do how things are going
+there."</p>
+
+<p>He shook his head.</p>
+
+<p>"I have no correspondents in Leeds," he answered.</p>
+
+<p>At that moment a puff of wind disturbed the papers by his side. A
+telegram would have fluttered away, but Blanche Mannering caught it at
+the edge of the table. She was handing it back, when a curious expression
+on Borrowdean's face inspired her with a sudden idea. She deliberately
+looked at the telegram, and her fingers stiffened upon it. His forward
+movement was checked. She stood just out of his reach.</p>
+
+<p>"No correspondents in Leeds," she repeated. "Then what about this
+telegram?"</p>
+
+<p>"You will permit me to remind you," he said, stretching out his hand for
+it, "that it is addressed to me."</p>
+
+<p>Her hands were behind her. She leaned over towards him.</p>
+
+<p>"It can be addressed to you a thousand times over," she answered, "but
+before I part with it I want to know what it means."</p>
+
+<p>Borrowdean was thinking quickly. He wanted to gain time.</p>
+
+<p>"I do not even know which document you have&mdash;purloined," he said.</p>
+
+<p>"It is from Leeds," she answered, "and it is signed Polden. 'Parkins
+found, has made statement, appears to-night.' Can you explain what this
+means, Sir Leslie Borrowdean?"</p>
+
+<p>Her voice was scarcely raised above a whisper, but there was a dangerous
+glitter in her eyes. There were few traces left of the woman whom once
+before he had found so easy a tool.</p>
+
+<p>"I cannot tell you," he answered. "It is not an affair for you to concern
+yourself with at all."</p>
+
+<p>"Not an affair for me to concern myself about!" she repeated, leaning
+a little over towards him. "Isn't it my husband against whom you are
+scheming? Don't I know what low tricks you are capable of? Isn't this
+another proof of it? Not an affair for me to concern myself about,
+indeed! Didn't you worm the whole miserable story out of me?"</p>
+
+<p>"My dear Mrs. Mannering!"</p>
+
+<p>She checked a torrent of words. Her bosom was heaving underneath her lace
+blouse. She was pale almost to the lips. The sudden and complete disuse
+of all manner of cosmetics had to a certain extent blanched her face.
+There was room there now for the writing of tragedy. Borrowdean, still
+outwardly suave, was inwardly cursing the unlucky chance which had blown
+the telegram her way.</p>
+
+<p>"Might I suggest," he said, in a low tone, "that we postpone our
+conversation till after breakfast time? The waiters seem to be favouring
+us with a great deal of attention, and several of them understand
+English."</p>
+
+<p>She did not even turn her head. Thinner a good deal since her marriage,
+she seemed to him to have grown taller, to have gained in dignity and
+presence, as she stood there before him, her angry eyes fixed upon his
+face. She was no longer a person to be ignored.</p>
+
+<p>"You must tell me about this&mdash;or&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Or?" he repeated, stonily.</p>
+
+<p>"Or I will make a public statement," she answered. "If you ruin my
+husband's career, I can at least do the same with yours. Politics is
+supposed to be a game for honourable men to play with honourable weapons.
+I wonder if Lord Redford would approve of your methods?"</p>
+
+<p>"You can go and ask him, my dear madam," he answered. "I am perfectly
+ready to defend myself."</p>
+
+<p>"Defend! You have no defence," she answered. "Can you deny that you are
+plotting to keep my husband out of Parliament now, just as a few months
+ago you plotted to bring him back? You are making use of a personal
+secret, a forgotten chapter of his life, to move him about like a puppet
+to do your will."</p>
+
+<p>"I work for the good of a cause and a great party," he answered. "You do
+not understand these things."</p>
+
+<p>"I understand you so far as this," she answered. "You are one of those to
+whom life is a chessboard, and your one aim is to make the pieces work
+for you, and at your bidding, till you sit in the place you covet. There
+isn't much of the patriot about you, Sir Leslie Borrowdean."</p>
+
+<p>He glanced down at his unfinished breakfast. He had the air of one who is
+a little bored.</p>
+
+<p>"My dear lady," he said, "is this discussion really worth while?"</p>
+
+<p>"No," she answered, bluntly, "it isn't. You are quite right. We are
+wandering from the subject."</p>
+
+<p>"Let us talk," he suggested, "after breakfast. Give me back that telegram
+now, and I will explain it, say, in the garden in half an hour. I detest
+cold coffee."</p>
+
+<p>"You can do like me, order some fresh," she said. "If I let you out of my
+sight I know very well how much I shall see of you for the rest of the
+day. Explain now if you can. What does that telegram mean?"</p>
+
+<p>"Surely it is obvious enough," he answered. "The man Parkins, whom you
+told me was dead, is alive and in Leeds. He has seen Mannering's name
+about, has been talking, and the press have got hold of his story. I am
+sorry, but there was always this possibility, wasn't there?"</p>
+
+<p>"And this telegram?" she asked.</p>
+
+<p>"I know Polden, the editor of the paper, and he referred to me to know if
+there could be any truth in it."</p>
+
+<p>"These are lies!" she declared. "You were the instigator. You set them on
+the track."</p>
+
+<p>"I have nothing more to say," Borrowdean declared, coldly.</p>
+
+<p>"I have," she said. "I shall take this telegram to Lord Redford. I shall
+tell him everything!"</p>
+
+<p>A faint smile flickered upon Borrowdean's lips.</p>
+
+<p>"Lord Redford would, I am sure, be charmed to hear your story," he
+remarked. "Unfortunately he started for Dieppe this morning before eight
+o'clock, and will not be back until to-morrow."</p>
+
+<p>"And to-morrow will be too late," she added, rapidly pursuing his train
+of thought. "Then I will try the Duchess!"</p>
+
+<p>He started very slightly, but she saw it.</p>
+
+<p>"Sit down for a moment, Mrs. Mannering," he said.</p>
+
+<p>She accepted the chair he placed for her. There was a distinct change in
+his manner. He realized that this woman held a trump card against him.
+Even in her hands it might mean disaster.</p>
+
+<p>"Blanche&mdash;" he began.</p>
+
+<p>"Thank you," she interrupted, "I prefer 'Mrs. Mannering.'"</p>
+
+<p>He bit his lips in annoyance.</p>
+
+<p>"Mrs. Mannering, then," he continued, "we have been allies before, and I
+think that you will admit that I have always kept faith with you. I don't
+see any reason why we should play at being enemies. You have a price, I
+suppose, for that telegram and your silence. Name it."</p>
+
+<p>She nodded.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, I have a price," she admitted.</p>
+
+<p>"Remember that, after all, this is not a great issue," he said. "If your
+husband does not get in for Leeds he will probably find a seat somewhere
+else."</p>
+
+<p>"That is false," she answered, "If your man Polden publishes Parkins's
+story my husband's political career is over, and you know it. Do keep as
+near to the truth as you can."</p>
+
+<p>"I will give you," he said, "five hundred pounds for that telegram and
+your silence."</p>
+
+<p>She rose slowly to her feet. A dull flush of colour mounted almost to
+her eyes. Borrowdean watched her anxiously. Then for a moment came an
+interruption. The Duchess was descending the grey stone steps from the
+hotel.</p>
+
+<p>She had addressed some word of greeting to them. They both turned towards
+her. She wore a white serge dress, and she carried a white lace parasol
+over her bare head. She moved towards them with her usual languid grace,
+followed by her maid carrying a tiny Maltese dog and a budget of letters.
+The loiterrers in the courtyard stared at her with admiration. It was
+impossible to mistake her for anything but a great lady.</p>
+
+<p>"You have the air of conspirators, you two!" she said, as she approached
+them. "Is it an expedition for the day that you are planning?"</p>
+
+<p>Blanche Mannering turned her back upon Borrowdean.</p>
+
+<p>"Sir Leslie," she said, "has just offered me five hundred pounds for a
+telegram which I have here and for my silence concerning its contents.
+I was wondering whether he had bid high enough."</p>
+
+<p>The Duchess looked from one to the other. She almost permitted herself to
+be astonished. Borrowdean's face was dark with anger. Blanche Mannering's
+apparent calmness was obviously of the surface only.</p>
+
+<p>"Are you serious?" she asked.</p>
+
+<p>"Miserably so!" Blanche answered. "Sir Leslie has strange ideas of
+honour, I find. He is making use of a story which I told him once
+concerning my husband, to drive him out of political life. Duchess, will
+you do me the favour to let me talk with you for five minutes, and to
+make Sir Leslie Borrowdean promise not to leave this hotel till you have
+seen him again?"</p>
+
+<p>"I have no intention of leaving the hotel," Sir Leslie said, stiffly.</p>
+
+<p>Berenice pointed to her table.</p>
+
+<p>"Come and take your coffee with me, Mrs. Mannering," she said.</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>Mannering passed through the day like a man in a nightmare. He addressed
+two meetings of working-men, and interviewed half a dozen of his workers.
+At mid-day the afternoon edition of the <i>Yorkshire Herald</i> was being sold
+in the streets. He bought a copy and glanced it feverishly through.
+Nothing! He lunched and went on with his work. At three o'clock a second
+edition was out. Again he purchased a copy, and again there was nothing.
+The suspense was getting worse even than the disaster itself. Between
+four and five they brought him in a telegram. He tore it open, and found
+that it was from Bonestre. The words seemed to stare up at him from the
+pink form. It was incredible:</p>
+
+<p>"Polden muzzled. Go in and win."</p>
+
+<p>The form fluttered from his fingers on to the floor of his sitting-room.
+He stood looking at it, dazed. Outside, a mob of people, standing round
+his carriage, were shouting his name.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_VIIb" id="CHAPTER_VIIb"></a>CHAPTER VII</h2>
+
+<h3>MR. MANNERING, M.P.</h3>
+
+
+<p>Mannering threw up his window with a sigh of immense relief. The air was
+cold and fresh. The land, as yet unwarmed by the slowly rising sun, was
+hung with a faint autumn mist. Traces of an early frost lay in the brown
+hedgerows inland; the sea was like a sheet of polished glass. Gone the
+smoke-stained rows of shapeless houses, the atmosphere polluted by a
+thousand chimneys belching smuts and black vapour, the clanging of
+electric cars, the rattle of all manner of vehicles over the cobbled
+streets. Gone the hoarse excitement of the shouting mobs, the poisonous
+atmosphere of close rooms, all the turmoil and racket and anxiety of
+those fighting days. He was back again in Bonestre. Below in the
+courtyard the white cockatoo was screaming. The waiters in their linen
+coats were preparing the tables for the few remaining guests. And the
+other things were of yesterday!</p>
+
+<p>Mannering had arrived in the middle of the night unexpectedly, and his
+appearance was a surprise to every one. He had knocked at his wife's door
+on his way downstairs, but Blanche had taken to early rising, and was
+already down. He found them all breakfasting together in a sheltered
+corner of the courtyard.</p>
+
+<p>Berenice, after the usual greetings and explanations, smiled at him
+thoughtfully.</p>
+
+<p>"I am not sure," she said, "whether I ought to congratulate you or not.
+Sir Leslie here thinks that you mean mischief!"</p>
+
+<p>"Only on the principle," Borrowdean said, "that whoever is not with us is
+against us."</p>
+
+<p>"We are all agreed upon one thing," Berenice said. "It was your last
+speech, the one the night before the election, which carried you in. A
+national party indeed! A legislator, not a politician! You talked to
+those canny Yorkshiremen with your head in the clouds, and yet they
+listened."</p>
+
+<p>Mannering smiled as he poured out his coffee.</p>
+
+<p>"I talked common sense to them," he remarked, "and Yorkshiremen like
+that. We have been slaves to the old-fashioned idea of party Government
+long enough. It's an absurd thing when you come to think of it. Fancy a
+great business being carried on by a board of partners of divergent
+views, and unable to make a purchase or a sale or effect any change
+whatever without talking the whole thing threadbare, and then voting
+upon it. The business would go down, of course!"</p>
+
+<p>"Party Government," Borrowdean declared, "is the natural evolution of
+any republican form of administration. A nation that chooses its own
+representatives must select them from its varying standpoint."</p>
+
+<p>"Their views may differ slightly upon some matters," Mannering said,
+"but their first duty should be to come into accord with one another.
+It is a matter for compromises, of course. The real differences between
+intelligent men of either party are very slight. The trouble is that
+under the present system everything is done to increase them instead
+of bridging them over."</p>
+
+<p>"If you had to form a Government, then," Berenice asked, "you would not
+choose the members from one party?"</p>
+
+<p>"Certainly not," Mannering answered. "Supposing I were the owner of
+Redford's car there, and wanted a driver. I should simply try to get the
+best man I could, and I should certainly not worry as to whether he were,
+say, a churchman or a dissenter. The best man for the post is what the
+country has a right to expect, whatever he may call himself, and the
+country doesn't get it. The people pay the piper, and I consider that
+they get shocking bad value for their money. The Boer War, for instance,
+would have cost us less than half as much if we had had the right men to
+direct the commercial side of it. That money would have been useful in
+the country just now."</p>
+
+<p>"An absolute monarchy," Hester said, smiling, "would be really the most
+logical form of Government, then? But would it answer?"</p>
+
+<p>"Why not?" Borrowdean asked. "If the monarch were incapable he would of
+course be shot!"</p>
+
+<p>"A dictator&mdash;" Berenice began, but Mannering held out his hands,
+laughing.</p>
+
+<p>"Think of my last few days, and spare me!" he begged. "I have thirty-six
+hours' holiday. How do you people spend your time here?"</p>
+
+<p>Berenice took him away with her as a matter of course. Blanche watched
+them depart with a curious tightening of the lips. She was standing alone
+in the gateway of the hotel, and she watched them until they were out of
+sight. Borrowdean, sauntering out to buy some papers, paused for a moment
+as he passed.</p>
+
+<p>"Your husband, Mrs. Mannering," he said, drily, "is a very fortunate
+man."</p>
+
+<p>She made no reply, and Borrowdean passed on. Hester came out with a
+message from Lady Redford&mdash;would Mrs. Mannering care to motor over to
+Berneval for luncheon? Blanche shook her head. She scarcely heard the
+invitation. She was still watching the two figures disappearing in the
+distance. Hester understood, but she spoke lightly.</p>
+
+<p>"I believe," she said, "that the Duchess still has hopes of Mr.
+Mannering."</p>
+
+<p>"She is a persistent woman," Blanche answered. "They say that she
+generally succeeds. Let us go in."</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>Berenice was listening to Mannering's account of his last few days'
+electioneering.</p>
+
+<p>"The whole affair came upon me like a thunderclap," he told her. "Richard
+Fardell found it out somehow, and he took me to see Parkins. But it was
+too late. Polden had hold of the story and meant to use it. I never
+imagined but that Parkins had been talking and this journalist had got
+hold of him by accident. Now I understand that it was Borrowdean who was
+pulling the strings."</p>
+
+<p>She nodded.</p>
+
+<p>"He traced Parkins out some time ago, and knew exactly where he was to be
+found."</p>
+
+<p>"I think," Mannering said, "that it is time Borrowdean and I came to some
+understanding. I haven't said anything about it yet. I don't exactly know
+what to say now. You are a very generous woman."</p>
+
+<p>She sighed.</p>
+
+<p>"No," she said, "I don't think that. Sir Leslie is a schemer of the class
+I detest. I listened to him once, and I have regretted it ever since. Yet
+you must remember this! If it had not been for him you would have been at
+Blakely to-day."</p>
+
+<p>His thoughts carried him backwards with a rush. Once more the thrall of
+that quiet life of passionless sweetness held him. He looked back upon it
+curiously, as a man who has passed into another country. Days of physical
+exaltation, alone with the sun and the wind and all the murmuring voices
+of Nature, God's life he had called it then. And now! The stress of
+battle was hard upon him. He was fighting in the front ranks, a somewhat
+cheerless battle, fighting for great causes with inefficient weapons. But
+he could not go back. Life had become a more strenuous, a more vital, a
+less beautiful thing! He felt himself ageing. All the inevitable sadness
+of the man in touch with the world's great problems was in his heart. But
+he could not go back.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," he said, quietly, "I owe that much to Borrowdean."</p>
+
+<p>"There is a question," she said, "which I have wanted to ask you. Do you
+regret, or are you glad to have been forced out once more upon the
+world's stage?"</p>
+
+<p>He smiled.</p>
+
+<p>"How can I answer you?" he asked. "At Blakely I was as happy as I knew
+how to be, and until you came I was content! But to-day, well, there are
+different things. How can I answer your question, indeed? Tell me what
+happiness means! Tell me whether it is an ignoble or a praiseworthy
+state!"</p>
+
+<p>Berenice was silent. Into her face there had come a sudden gravity.
+Mannering, glancing towards her, was at once conscious of the change. He
+saw the weariness so often and zealously repressed, the ageing of her
+face, the sudden triumph of the despair which in the quiet moments
+chilled her heart. It seemed to him that for that moment they had come
+into some closer communion. He bent over towards her.</p>
+
+<p>"Ah!" he murmured, "you, too, are beginning to understand. Happiness is
+only for the ignorant. For you and for me knowledge has eaten its way
+too far into our lives. We climb all the while, but the flowers in the
+meadows are the fairest."</p>
+
+<p>She shook her head.</p>
+
+<p>"The little white flower which grows in the mountains is what we must
+always seek," she answered. "The meadows are for the others."</p>
+
+<p>"We are accursed with this knowledge, and the desire for it," he
+declared, fiercely. "The suffering is for us, and the joy for the beasts
+of the field. Why not throw down the cards? We are the devil's puppets in
+this game of life."</p>
+
+<p>"There is no place for us down there," she answered, sadly. "There is joy
+enough for them, because the finger has never touched their eyes. But for
+us&mdash;no, we have to go on! I was a foolish woman, Lawrence. I lost my
+sense of proportion. Traditions, you see, were hard to break away from. I
+did not understand. Let this be the end of all mention of such things
+between us. We have missed the turning, and we must go on. That is the
+hardest thing in life. One can never retrace one's steps."</p>
+
+<p>"We go on&mdash;apart?"</p>
+
+<p>"We must," she said. "Don't think me prejudiced, Lawrence. I must stand
+by my party. Theoretically, I think that you are the only logical
+politician I have ever known. Actually, I think that you are steering
+your course towards the sandbanks. You will fail, but you will fail
+magnificently. Well, that is something."</p>
+
+<p>"It is a good deal," he answered, "but if I live long enough, and my
+strength remains, I shall succeed. I shall place the Government of
+this country upon an altogether different basis. I shall empty the
+work-houses and fill the factories. Nothing short of that will content
+me. Nothing short of that would content any man upon whose shoulders the
+burden has fallen."</p>
+
+<p>"You have centuries of prejudice to fight," she warned him. "You may not
+succeed! Yet you have all my good wishes. I shall always watch you."</p>
+
+<p>They turned homeward in silence. All that had passed between them seemed
+to be already far back in the past. Their retrogression seemed almost
+symbolical. They spoke of indifferent things.</p>
+
+<p>"Tell me," he asked, "how you came to know what was going on in Leeds."</p>
+
+<p>"It was your wife," she said, "who discovered it!"</p>
+
+<p>"My wife?"</p>
+
+<p>"She saw a telegram on Sir Leslie's table at breakfast, a telegram from
+the man Polden. She read it and demanded an explanation. Sir Leslie tried
+all he could to wriggle out of it, but in vain. She appealed to me. Even
+I had a great deal of difficulty in dealing with him, but eventually he
+gave way."</p>
+
+<p>"Then the telegram," Mannering asked, "wasn't that from you?"</p>
+
+<p>She shook her head.</p>
+
+<p>"It was from your wife," she said. "I cannot take much credit for myself.
+It is she whom you must thank for your election. I came out at rather
+a dramatic moment. Sir Leslie had just offered her money, five hundred
+pounds, I think, to give him back his telegram and say nothing. She
+appealed to me at once, and Sir Leslie looked positively foolish."</p>
+
+<p>"I am much obliged to you for telling me," Mannering muttered. He
+remembered now that he had scarcely spoken a dozen words to his wife
+since his return.</p>
+
+<p>"Mrs. Mannering appears to have your interests very much at heart,"
+Berenice said, quietly. "She proved herself quite a match for Sir Leslie.
+I think that he would have left here at once, only we are expecting Clara
+back."</p>
+
+<p>Mannering smiled scornfully.</p>
+
+<p>"I do not think that even Clara," he said, "is quite fool enough not to
+recognize in Borrowdean the arrant opportunist. For my part I am glad
+that all pretence at friendship between us is now at an end. He is one
+of those men whom I should count more dangerous as a friend than as an
+enemy."</p>
+
+<p>Berenice did not reply. They were already in the courtyard of the hotel.
+Blanche was in a wicker chair in a sunny corner, talking to a couple of
+young Englishmen. Berenice turned towards the steps. They parted without
+any further words.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_VIIIb" id="CHAPTER_VIIIb"></a>CHAPTER VIII</h2>
+
+<h3>PLAYING THE GAME</h3>
+
+
+<p>Mannering for a moment hesitated. One of the two young men who were
+talking to his wife he recognized as a former acquaintance of hers&mdash;one
+of a genus whom he had little sympathy with and less desire to know.
+While he stood there Blanche laughed at some remark made by one of her
+companions, and the laugh, too, seemed somehow to remind him of the old
+days. He moved slowly forward.</p>
+
+<p>The young men strolled off almost at once. Mannering took a vacant chair
+by his wife's side.</p>
+
+<p>"I have only just heard," he said, "how much I have to thank you for. I
+took it for granted somehow that it was the Duchess who had discovered
+our friend Borrowdean's little scheme and sent that telegram. Why didn't
+you sign it?"</p>
+
+<p>She shrugged her shoulders.</p>
+
+<p>"It was the Duchess who made him chuck it up," she said. "I could never
+have made him do that. I was an idiot to let Parkins stay in England at
+all."</p>
+
+<p>"I always understood," he said, "that he was dead."</p>
+
+<p>"I let you think so," she answered. "I thought you might worry. But
+seriously, if he told the truth, now, after all these years, would any
+one take any notice of it?"</p>
+
+<p>"Very likely not," he said, "so far as regards any criminal
+responsibility. But our political life is fenced about by all the
+middle-class love of propriety and hatred of all form of scandal.
+Parkins's story, authenticated or not, would have lost me my seat
+for Leeds."</p>
+
+<p>"Then I am very glad," she said, "that I happened to see the telegram. Do
+you know where Parkins is now?"</p>
+
+<p>"One of my supporters," he said, "a queer little man named Richard
+Fardell, has him in tow. He is bringing him up to London, I think."</p>
+
+<p>She nodded.</p>
+
+<p>"What are you doing this afternoon?" he asked.</p>
+
+<p>She looked at him curiously.</p>
+
+<p>"Mr. Englehall has asked me to go out in his car," she said. "I am rather
+tired of motoring, but I think I shall go."</p>
+
+<p>Mannering lit a cigarette which he had just taken from his case.</p>
+
+<p>"I don't think I should," he remarked.</p>
+
+<p>She turned her head slowly, and looked at him.</p>
+
+<p>"Why not?" she asked. "How can it concern you? Your plans for the
+afternoon are, I presume, already made!"</p>
+
+<p>"It may not concern me directly," he answered, "but I have an idea that
+Mr. Englehall is not exactly the sort of person I care to have you
+driving about with."</p>
+
+<p>She laughed hardly.</p>
+
+<p>"I am most flattered by your interest in me," she declared. "Pray
+consider Mr. Englehall disposed of. You have some other plans, perhaps?"</p>
+
+<p>"If you care to," he said, "we will walk down to the club for lunch and
+come home by the sea."</p>
+
+<p>"Alone?"</p>
+
+<p>"Certainly! Unless you choose to bring Hester."</p>
+
+<p>She rose slowly to her feet.</p>
+
+<p>"No," she said. "Let us go alone. It will be almost the first time since
+we were married, I think. I am curious to see how much I can bore you!
+Will you wait here while I find a hat?"</p>
+
+<p>She disappeared inside the hotel. Mannering watched her absently. In
+a vague sort of way he was wondering what it was that had made their
+married life so completely a failure. He had imagined her as asking very
+little from him, content with the shelter of his name and home, content
+at any rate without those things of which he had made no mention when he
+had spoken to her of marriage. And he was becoming gradually aware that
+it was not so. She expected, had hoped for more. The terms which he had
+zealously striven to cultivate with her were terms of which she clearly
+did not approve. The signs of revolt were already apparent.</p>
+
+<p>Mannering became absorbed in thought. He remembered clearly the feelings
+with which he had gone to her and made his offer. He went over it all
+again. Surely he had made himself understood? But then there was her
+confession to him, the confession of her love. He had ignored that, but
+it was unforgetable. Had he not tacitly accepted the whole situation? If
+so, was he doing his duty? The shelter of his name and home, what were
+those to a warm-hearted woman, if she loved him? He had married her,
+loving another woman. She must have known this, but did she understand
+that he was not prepared to make any effort to accept the inevitable? He
+was still deep in thought when Berenice came out.</p>
+
+<p>"What are you doing there all by yourself?" she asked. "Where is your
+wife?"</p>
+
+<p>"She has gone to get a hat," he answered. "We thought of going to the
+club for <i>d&eacute;jeuner</i>."</p>
+
+<p>She nodded.</p>
+
+<p>"A delightful idea," she said. "Do invite me, and I will take you in the
+car. Mrs. Mannering likes motoring, I know."</p>
+
+<p>"Of course!" he said. "We shall be delighted!"</p>
+
+<p>She beckoned to her chauffer, who was in the courtyard. Just then Blanche
+came out. She had changed her gown for one of plain white serge, and she
+wore a hat of tuscan straw which Mannering had once admired.</p>
+
+<p>"You won't mind motoring, Mrs. Mannering?" Berenice said, as she
+approached. "I have invited myself to luncheon with you, and I am going
+to take you round to the club in the car."</p>
+
+<p>Blanche stood quite still for a moment. The sun was in her eyes, and she
+lowered her parasol for a moment.</p>
+
+<p>"It will be very pleasant," she said, quietly, "only I think that I will
+go in and change my hat. I thought that we were going to walk."</p>
+
+<p>She retraced her steps, walking a little wearily. Berenice came and sat
+down by Mannering's side.</p>
+
+<p>"I hope Mrs. Mannering does not object to my coming," she said. "It
+occurred to me that she was not particularly cordial."</p>
+
+<p>"It is only her manner," he answered. "It is very good of you to take
+us."</p>
+
+<p>"Your wife doesn't like me," Berenice said. "I wonder why. I thought that
+I had been rather decent to her."</p>
+
+<p>"Blanche is a little odd," Mannering answered. "I am afraid that it is my
+fault. Here are the Redfords. I wonder if they would join us."</p>
+
+<p>"Three," she murmured, "is certainly an awkward number."</p>
+
+<p>In the end the party became rather a large one, for Lord Redford met some
+old friends at the club who insisted upon their joining tables. In the
+interval, whilst they waited for luncheon, Mannering contrived to have
+a word alone with his wife.</p>
+
+<p>"I am not responsible," he said, "for this enlargement of our party. The
+Duchess invited herself."</p>
+
+<p>"It does not matter," she declared, listlessly. "What are you doing
+afterwards?"</p>
+
+<p>"Playing golf, I fancy," he answered. "You heard what Redford said about
+a foursome."</p>
+
+<p>"And you are returning&mdash;when?"</p>
+
+<p>"I must leave here at six to-morrow morning."</p>
+
+<p>They were leaning over the white palings of the pavilion, looking out
+upon the last green. She seemed to be watching the approach of two
+players who were just coming in.</p>
+
+<p>"It is a long way to come," she remarked, "for so short a time."</p>
+
+<p>He shrugged his shoulders.</p>
+
+<p>"The aftermath of a contested election is a thing to escape from," he
+said. "I felt that I wanted to get as far away as possible, and then
+again I wanted to find out who it was who had sent that telegram."</p>
+
+<p>They sat apart at luncheon, and Blanche was much quieter than usual. The
+others were all old friends. It seemed to her more than ordinarily
+apparent that she was present on sufferance, accepted as Mannering's
+wife, as an evil to be endured, and, so far as possible, ignored.
+Mannering himself spoke to her now and then across the table. Lord
+Redford, always good-natured, made a few efforts to draw her into the
+conversation. But it seemed to her that she had lost her confidence. The
+freemasonry of old acquaintance which existed between all of them left
+her outside an invisible but very real circle. Words came to her with
+difficulty. She felt stupid, almost shy. When she made an effort to break
+through it she was acutely conscious of her failure. Her laugh was too
+hard, it lacked sincerity or restraint. The cigarette which she smoked
+out of bravado with her coffee, seemed somehow out of place. When at last
+luncheon was over Mannering left his place and came over to her.</p>
+
+<p>"The Duchess and I," he said, "are going to play Lord Redford and Mrs.
+Arbuthnot. Won't you walk round with us? The links are really very
+pretty."</p>
+
+<p>"Thanks, I hate watching golf," she answered, rising and shaking out her
+skirt. "Hester and I will walk home."</p>
+
+<p>"Do take the car, Mrs. Mannering," Berenice said. "It will simply be
+waiting here doing nothing."</p>
+
+<p>"Thank you," Blanche answered. "I shall enjoy the walk."</p>
+
+<p>The foursome was played in very leisurely fashion. There was plenty of
+time for conversation.</p>
+
+<p>"I don't quite understand your wife," Berenice said to Mannering. "Her
+dislike of me is a little too obvious. What does it mean? Do you know?"</p>
+
+<p>He shook his head. He was looking very pale and tired.</p>
+
+<p>"I am not sure that I know anything about it at all," he said. "I am
+beginning to distrust my own judgment."</p>
+
+<p>"Your marriage&mdash;" she began, thoughtfully.</p>
+
+<p>"Don't let us talk about it," he interrupted. "I tried to pay a debt.
+It seems to me that I have only incurred a fresh one."</p>
+
+<p>They were silent for some time. Then their opponents lost a ball and
+displayed no particular diligence in attempting to find it. Berenice sat
+down upon a plank seat.</p>
+
+<p>"Your marriage," she said, "seemed always to me a piece of quixotism.
+I never altogether understood it."</p>
+
+<p>"It was an affair of impulse," he said, slowly. "Life from a personal
+point of view had lost all interest to me. I did not dream after
+my&mdash;shall we call it apostacy?&mdash;that I could rely upon even a modicum
+of your friendship. I looked upon myself as an outcast commencing life
+afresh. Then chance intervened. I thought I saw my way to making some
+atonement to a woman whose life I had certainly helped to ruin. That was
+where the serious part of the mistake came. I thought what I had to offer
+would be sufficient. I am beginning now to doubt it."</p>
+
+<p>"And what are you going to do?" she asked, looking steadily away from
+him.</p>
+
+<p>"Heaven knows," he answered, bitterly. "I cannot give what I do not
+possess."</p>
+
+<p>Was it his fancy, or was there a gleam of satisfaction about her still,
+pale face? He went on.</p>
+
+<p>"I don't want to play the hypocrite. On the other hand I don't want all
+that I have done to go for nothing. Can you advise me?"</p>
+
+<p>"No, nor any one else," she answered, softly.</p>
+
+<p>"Yet I can perhaps correct a little your point of view. I think that you
+overestimate your indebtedness to the woman whom you have made your wife.
+Her husband was a weak, dissipated creature and he was a doomed man long
+before that unfortunate day. It is even very questionable whether that
+scene in which you figured had anything whatever to do in hastening his
+death. That is a good many years ago, and ever since then you seem to
+have impoverished yourself to find her the means to live in luxury. I
+consider that you paid your debt over and over again, and that your final
+act of self-abnegation was entirely uncalled for. What more she wants
+from you I do not know. Perhaps I can imagine."</p>
+
+<p>There was a moment's silence. She turned her head and looked at
+him&mdash;looked him in the eyes unshamed, yet with her secret shining there
+for him to see.</p>
+
+<p>"There may be others, Lawrence," she said, "to whom you owe something. A
+woman cannot take back what she has given. There may be sufferers in the
+world whom you ought also to consider. And a woman loves to think that
+what she may not have herself is at least kept sacred&mdash;to her memory."</p>
+
+<p>"Fore!" cried Lord Redford, who had found his ball. "Awfully decent of
+you people to wait so long. We were afraid you meant to claim the hole!"</p>
+
+<p>Mannering rose to play his shot.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<a href="images/ill7_th.jpg"><img src="images/ill7_th.jpg" alt=""/></a>
+</div>
+
+<p>"The Duchess and I, Lord Redford," he said, lightly, "scorn to take small
+advantages. We mean to play the game!"</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_IXb" id="CHAPTER_IXb"></a>CHAPTER IX</h2>
+
+<h3>THE TRAGEDY OF A KEY</h3>
+
+
+<p>Blanche, in a plain black net gown, sat on Lord Redford's right hand at
+the hastily improvised dinner party that evening. Berenice, more subtly
+and more magnificently dressed, was opposite, by Mannering's side. The
+conversation seemed mostly to circle about them.</p>
+
+<p>"A very charming place," Lord Redford declared. "I have enjoyed my stay
+here thoroughly. Let us hope that we may all meet here again next year,"
+he added, raising his glass. "Mannering, you will drink to that, I hope?"</p>
+
+<p>"With all my heart," Mannering answered. "And you, Blanche?"</p>
+
+<p>She raised her almost untasted glass and touched it with her lips. She
+set it down with a faint smile. Berenice moved her head towards him.</p>
+
+<p>"Your wife is not very enthusiastic," she remarked.</p>
+
+<p>"She neither plays golf nor bathes," Mannering said. "It is possible that
+she finds it a little dull."</p>
+
+<p>"Both are habits which it is possible to acquire," Berenice answered. "I
+am telling your husband, Mrs. Mannering," she continued, "that you ought
+to learn to play golf."</p>
+
+<p>"Lawrence has offered to teach me more than once," Blanche answered,
+calmly. "I am afraid that games do not attract me. Besides, I am too old
+to learn!"</p>
+
+<p>"My dear Mrs. Mannering!" Lord Redford protested.</p>
+
+<p>"I am forty-two," Blanche replied, "and at that age a woman thinks twice
+before she begins anything new in the shape of vigorous exercise.
+Besides, I find plenty to amuse me here."</p>
+
+<p>"Might one ask in what direction?" Berenice murmured. "I have found in
+the place many things that are delightful, but not amusing."</p>
+
+<p>"I find amusement often in watching my neighbours," Blanche said. "I like
+to ask myself what it is they want, and to study their way of attaining
+it. You generally find that every one is fairly transparent when once you
+have found the key&mdash;and everybody is trying for something which they
+don't care for other people to know about."</p>
+
+<p>The Duchess looked at Blanche steadily. There was a certain insolence,
+the insolence of her aristocratic birth and assured position in the level
+stare of her clear brown eyes. But Blanche did not flinch.</p>
+
+<p>"I had no idea, Mrs. Mannering, that you had tastes of that sort,"
+Berenice said, languidly. "Suppose you give us a few examples."</p>
+
+<p>"Not for the world," Blanche answered, fervently. "Did you say that we
+were to have coffee outside, Lord Redford? How delightful! I wonder if
+Lady Redford is ready."</p>
+
+<p>They all trooped out in a minute or two. Berenice laid her hand upon
+Mannering's arm.</p>
+
+<p>"Your wife," she said, quietly, "is going a little too far. She is
+getting positively rude to me!"</p>
+
+<p>Mannering muttered some evasive reply. He, too, had marked the note of
+battle in Blanche's tone. He had noticed, too, the unusual restraint of
+her manner. She had drunk little or no wine at dinner time, and she had
+talked quietly and sensibly. Directly they reached the courtyard she
+seated herself on a settee for two, and made room for him by her side.</p>
+
+<p>"Come and tell me about the golf match," she said. "Who won?"</p>
+
+<p>Mannering had no alternative but to obey. Lady Redford, however, drew her
+chair up close to theirs, and the conversation was always general.
+Berenice in a few minutes rose to her feet.</p>
+
+<p>"Listen to the sea," she exclaimed. "Don't some of you want to come down
+to the rocks and watch it?"</p>
+
+<p>Blanche rose up at once.</p>
+
+<p>"Do come, Lawrence, if you are not too tired!" she said.</p>
+
+<p>The whole party trooped out on to the promenade. Blanche passed her arm
+through her husband's, and calmly appropriated him.</p>
+
+<p>"You can walk with whom you please presently, Lawrence," she said, "but
+I want you for a few minutes. I suppose you will admit that I have some
+claim?"</p>
+
+<p>"Certainly," Mannering answered. "I have never denied it."</p>
+
+<p>"I am your wife," Blanche said, "though heaven knows why you ever married
+me. The Duchess is, I suppose, the woman whom you would have married if
+you hadn't got into a mess with your politics. She is a very attractive
+woman, and you married me, of course, out of pity, or some such maudlin
+reason. But all the same I am here, and&mdash;I don't care what you do when
+I can't see you, but I won't have her make love to you before my face."</p>
+
+<p>"The Duchess is not that sort of woman, Blanche," Mannering said,
+gravely.</p>
+
+<p>"Isn't she?" Blanche remarked, unconvinced. "Well, I've watched her, and
+in my opinion she isn't very different from any other sort of woman. Do
+you wish you were free very much? I know she does!"</p>
+
+<p>"Is there any object to be gained by this conversation?" Mannering asked.
+"Frankly, I don't like it. I made you no absurd promises when I married
+you. I think that you understood the position very well. So far as I know
+I have given you no cause to complain."</p>
+
+<p>They had reached the end of the promenade. Blanche leaned over the rail.
+Her eyes seemed fixed upon a light flashing and disappearing across the
+sea. Mannering stood uncomfortably by her side.</p>
+
+<p>"No cause to complain!" she repeated, as though to herself. "No,
+I suppose not. And yet, how much the better off do you think I am,
+Lawrence? I had friends before of some sort or another. Some of them
+pretended to like me, even if they didn't. I did as I chose. I lived as I
+liked. I was my own mistress. And now&mdash;well, there is no one! I enjoy the
+respectability of your name, the privilege of knowing your friends, the
+ability to pay my bills, but I should go stark mad if it wasn't for
+Hester. I gave myself away to you, I know. You married me for pity, I
+know. But what in God's name do I get out of it?"</p>
+
+<p>A note of real passion quivered in her tone. Mannering looked down at her
+helplessly, taken wholly aback, without the power for a moment to
+formulate his thoughts. There was a touch of colour in her pale cheeks,
+her eyes were lit with an unusual fire. The faint moonlight was kind to
+her. Her features, thinner than they had been, seemed to have gained a
+certain refinement. She reminded him more than ever before of the Blanche
+of many years ago. He answered her kindly, almost tenderly.</p>
+
+<p>"I am very sorry," he said, "if I have caused you any suffering. What I
+did I did for the best. I don't think that I quite understood, and I
+thought that you knew&mdash;what had come into my life."</p>
+
+<p>"I knew that you cared for her, of course," she answered, with a little
+sob, "but I did not know that you meant to nurse it&mdash;that feeling. I
+thought that when we were married you would try to care for me&mdash;a little.
+I&mdash;Here are the others!"</p>
+
+<p>Lord Redford, who had failed to amuse Berenice, and who had a secret
+preference for the woman who generally amused him, broke up their
+<i>t&ecirc;te-&agrave;-t&ecirc;te</i>. He led Blanche away, and Mannering followed with Berenice.</p>
+
+<p>"What does this change in your wife mean?" she asked, abruptly.</p>
+
+<p>"Change?" he repeated.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes! She watches us! If it were not too absurd, one would believe her
+jealous. Of course, it is not my business to ask you on what terms you
+are with your wife, but&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"You know what terms," he interrupted.</p>
+
+<p>Her manner softened. She looked at him for a moment and then her eyes
+dropped.</p>
+
+<p>"I am rather a hateful woman!" she said, slowly. "I wish I had not said
+that. I don't think we have managed things very cleverly, Lawrence.
+Still, I suppose life is made up of these sorts of idiotic blunders."</p>
+
+<p>"Mine," he said, "has been always distinguished by them."</p>
+
+<p>"And mine," she said, "only since I came to Blakely, and learnt to talk
+nonsense in your rose-garden! But come," she added, more briskly, "we are
+breaking our compact. We agreed to be friends, you know, and abjure
+sentiment."</p>
+
+<p>He nodded.</p>
+
+<p>"It seemed quite easy then," he remarked.</p>
+
+<p>"And it is easy now! It must be," she added. "I have scarcely
+congratulated you upon your election. What it all means, and with which
+party you are going to vote, I scarcely know even now. But I can at least
+congratulate you personally."</p>
+
+<p>"You are generous," he said, "for I suppose I am a deserter. As to where
+I shall sit, it is very hard to tell. I fancy myself that we are on the
+eve of a complete readjustment of parties. Wherever I may find myself,
+however, it will scarcely be with your friends."</p>
+
+<p>She nodded.</p>
+
+<p>"I realize that, and I am sorry," she said. "All that we need is a
+leader, and you might have been he. As it is, I suppose we shall muddle
+along somehow until some one comes out of the ruck strong enough to pull
+us together.... Come and see me in London, Lawrence. Who knows but that
+you may be able to convert me!"</p>
+
+<p>"You are too staunch," he answered, "and you have not seen what I have
+seen."</p>
+
+<p>She sighed.</p>
+
+<p>"Didn't you once tell me at Blakely that politics for a woman was a
+mischosen profession&mdash;that we were at once too obstinate and too
+sentimental? Perhaps you were right. We don't come into touch with
+the same forces that you meet with, and we come into touch with others
+which make the world seem curiously upside-down. Good-night, Lawrence!
+I am going to my room quietly. Lady Redford wants to play bridge, and I
+don't feel like it! <i>Bon voyage!</i>"</p>
+
+<p>Mannering stood alone in the little courtyard, lit now with hanging
+lights, and crowded with stray visitors who had strolled in from the
+streets. The rest of the party had gone into the salon beyond, and
+Mannering felt curiously disinclined to join them. Suddenly there was a
+touch upon his arm. He turned round. Blanche was standing there looking
+up at him. Something in her face puzzled him. Her eyes fell before his.
+She was pale, yet as he looked at her a flood of colour rushed into her
+cheeks. His momentary impression of her eyes was that they were very soft
+and very bright. She had thrown off her wrap, and with her left hand was
+holding up her white skirt. Her right hand was clenched as though holding
+something, and extended timidly towards him.</p>
+
+<p>"I wanted to say good-night to you&mdash;and&mdash;there was something else&mdash;this!"</p>
+
+<p>Something passed from her hand to his, something cold and hard. He looked
+at her in amazement, but she was already on her way up the grey stone
+steps which led from the courtyard into the hotel, and she did not turn
+back. He opened his hand and stared at what he found there. It was a
+key&mdash;number forty-four, <i>Premier &eacute;tage</i>.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<a href="images/ill8_th.jpg"><img src="images/ill8_th.jpg" alt=""/></a>
+</div>
+
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_Xb" id="CHAPTER_Xb"></a>CHAPTER X</h2>
+
+<h3>BLANCHE FINDS A WAY OUT</h3>
+
+
+<p>Mannering was conscious of an overpowering desire to be alone. He made
+his way out of the courtyard and back to the promenade. Some of the
+lights were already extinguished, and a slight drizzling rain was
+falling. He walked at once to the further wall, and stood leaning over,
+looking into the chaos of darkness. The key, round which his fingers
+were still tightly clenched, seemed almost to burn his flesh.</p>
+
+<p>What to do? How much more of himself was he bound to surrender? Through a
+confusion of thoughts some things came to him then very clearly. Amongst
+others the grim, pitiless selfishness of his life. How much must she have
+suffered before she had dared to do this thing! He had taken up a burden
+and adjusted the weight to suit himself. He had had no thought for her,
+no care save that the seemliness of his own absorbed life might not be
+disturbed. And behind it all the other reason. What a pigmy of a man he
+was, after all.</p>
+
+<p>A clock from the town struck eleven. He must decide! A vision of her rose
+up before him. He understood now her weakness and her strength. She was
+an ordinary woman, seeking the affection her sex demanded from its
+legitimate source. He understood the coming and going of the colour in
+her cheeks, her strained attempts to please, her barely controlled
+jealousy. In that mad moment when he had planned for her salvation he had
+imagined that she would have understood. What folly! Why should she? The
+complex workings of his innermost nature were scarcely likely to have
+been patent to her. What right had he to build upon that? What right, as
+an honest man, to contract a debt he never meant to pay? If he had not at
+the moment realized his responsibilities that was his own fault. From her
+point of view they were obvious enough, and it was from her point of view
+as well as his own that they must be considered.</p>
+
+<p>He turned back to the hotel, walking a little unsteadily. All the time he
+was not sure that this was not a dream. And then on the wet pavement he
+came face to face with two cloaked figures, one of whom stopped short and
+called him by name. It was Berenice!</p>
+
+<p>"You!" he exclaimed, more than ever sure that he was not properly awake.</p>
+
+<p>"Is it so wonderful?" she answered. "To tell you the truth, I was not
+sleepy, and I felt like a little walk. You can go back now, Bryan," she
+said, turning to her maid. "Mr. Mannering will see me home."</p>
+
+<p>As though by mutual consent they crossed to the sea-wall.</p>
+
+<p>"What made you come out again?" she asked. "No, don't answer me! I think
+that I know."</p>
+
+<p>"Impossible," he murmured.</p>
+
+<p>"I was going up to my room," she said, "and as I passed the landing
+window which looks into the courtyard I saw you talking to your wife.
+I&mdash;I am afraid that I watched. I saw her leave you."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes!"</p>
+
+<p>"What was it that she gave you? What is it that you have in your hand?"</p>
+
+<p>He opened his fingers. She turned her head away. It seemed to him an
+eternity that she stood there. When she spoke her voice was scarcely more
+than a whisper.</p>
+
+<p>"Lawrence," she said, "we have been very selfish, you and I! There have
+been no words between us, but I think the compact has been there all the
+same. It seemed to me somehow that it was a compensation, that it was
+part of the natural order of things, that as our own folly had kept us
+apart, you should still belong to me&mdash;in my thoughts. And I have no right
+to this, or any share of you, Lawrence."</p>
+
+<p>He drew a little nearer to her. She moved instantly away.</p>
+
+<p>"I am glad," she said, "that our party breaks up to-morrow. When we meet
+again, Lawrence, it must be differently. I am parting with a great deal
+that has been precious to me, but it must be. It is quite clear."</p>
+
+<p>"I made no promise!" he cried, hoarsely. "I did not mean&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>She stopped him with a swift glance.</p>
+
+<p>"Never mind that. You and I are not of the race of people who shrink from
+their duty, or fear to do what is right. Your wife's face taught me mine.
+Your conscience will tell you yours."</p>
+
+<p>"You mean?" he exclaimed.</p>
+
+<p>"You know what I mean. We shall meet again, of course, but this is none
+the less our farewell. No, don't touch me! Not even my hand, Lawrence.
+Don't make it any harder. Let us go in."</p>
+
+<p>But he did not move. The place where they stood was deserted. From below
+the white spray came leaping up almost to their faces as the waves beat
+against the wall. Behind them the town was black and deserted, save where
+a few lights gleamed out from the hotel. She shivered a little, and drew
+her cloak around her.</p>
+
+<p>"Come," she said, "I am getting cold and cramped."</p>
+
+<p>He walked by her side to the hotel. At the foot of the steps she left
+him.</p>
+
+<p>"We shall meet again in London," she said, quietly. "Don't be too hard
+upon your old friends when you take your seat. Remember that you were
+once one of us."</p>
+
+<p>She looked round and waved her hand as she disappeared. He caught a
+glimpse of her face as she passed underneath the hanging lamp&mdash;the face
+of a tired woman suddenly grown old. With a little groan he made his way
+into the hotel, and slowly ascended the stairs.</p>
+
+<p>Early the next morning Mannering left Bonestre, and in twenty-four hours
+he was back again, summoned by a telegram which had met him in London. It
+seemed to him that everybody at the station and about the hotel regarded
+him with shocked and respectful sympathy. Hester, looking like a ghost,
+took him at once to her room. He was haggard and weary with rapid
+travelling, and he sank into a chair.</p>
+
+<p>"Tell me&mdash;the worst!" he said.</p>
+
+<p>"She started with Mr. Englehall about mid-day," Hester said. "They had
+luggage, but I explained that he was going to Paris, she was coming back
+by train. At two o'clock we were rung up on the telephone. Their brake
+had snapped going down the hill by St. Entuiel, and the chauffeur&mdash;he is
+mad now&mdash;but they think he lost his nerve. They were dashed into a tree,
+and&mdash;they were both dead&mdash;when they were got out from the wreck."</p>
+
+<p>"God in Heaven!" Mannering murmured, white to the lips.</p>
+
+<p>There was a silence between them. Mannering had covered his head with his
+hands. Hester tried once or twice to speak, but the tears were streaming
+from her eyes. She had the air of having more to say. The white horror of
+tragedy was still in her face.</p>
+
+<p>"There is a letter," she said at last. "She left a letter for you."</p>
+
+<p>Mannering rose slowly to his feet and moved to the lamp. Directly he had
+broken the seal he understood. He read the first line and looked up. His
+eyes met Hester's.</p>
+
+<p>"Who knows&mdash;this?" he asked, hoarsely.</p>
+
+<p>"No one! They had not been gone two hours. I explained everything."</p>
+
+<p>Then Mannering read on.</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>"<span class="smcap">My dear Husband</span>:</p>
+
+<p>"I call you that for the last time, for I am going off with Englehall to
+Paris. Don't be too shocked, and don't despise me too much. I am just a
+very ordinary woman, and I'm afraid I've bad blood in my veins. Anyhow,
+I can't go on living under a glass case any longer. The old life was
+rotten enough, but this is insupportable. I'm going to have a fling, and
+after that I don't care what becomes of me.</p>
+
+<p>"Now, Lawrence, I don't want you to blame yourself. I did think perhaps
+that when we were married I might have got you to care for me a little,
+but I suppose that was just my vanity. It wasn't very possible with a
+woman like&mdash;well, never mind who&mdash;about. You did your best. You were very
+nice and very kind to me last night, but it wasn't the real thing, was
+it? I knew you hated being where you were. I could almost hear your sigh
+of relief when I let you go. The fact of it is, our marriage was a
+mistake. I ought to have been satisfied with your name, I suppose, and
+the position it gave me, but I'm not that sort of woman. I've been in
+Bohemia too long. I like cheery friends, even if their names are not in
+Debrett, and I must have some one to care for me, or to pretend to care
+for me. You know I've cared for you&mdash;only you in a certain way&mdash;but I'm
+not heroic enough to be content with a shadowy love. I'm not an idealist.
+Imagination doesn't content me in the least. I'd rather have an inferior
+substance than ideal perfection. You see, I'm a very commonplace person
+at heart, Lawrence&mdash;almost vulgar. But these are my last words to you,
+so I've gone in for plain speaking. Now you're rid of me.</p>
+
+<p>"That's all! From your point of view I suppose, and your friends, I've
+gone to the devil. Don't be too sure of it. I'm going to have a good
+time, and when the end comes I'm willing to pay. If you are idiotic
+enough to come after me, I shall be angry with you for the first time
+in my life, and it wouldn't be the least bit of use. Englehall's an old
+friend of mine, and he's a good sort. He's wanted me to do this often
+enough for years, but I never felt quite like it. I believe he'd marry
+me after, but he's got a wife shut up somewhere.</p>
+
+<p>"I expect you think this a callous sort of letter. Well, I can't help
+it. If it disgusts you with me, so much the better. I'm sorry for the
+scandal, but you will get over that. Good-bye, Lawrence. Forgive me all
+the bother I've been to you.</p>
+
+<p>"<span class="smcap">Blanche</span>."</p></div>
+
+<p>Mannering looked up from the letter, and again his eyes met Hester's. The
+secret was theirs alone. Very carefully he tore the pages into small
+pieces. Then he opened the stove and watched them consumed.</p>
+
+<p>"No one will ever know," Hester said. "She said&mdash;when she left&mdash;that it
+was a morning's ride&mdash;but motors were so uncertain that she took a bag."</p>
+
+<p>Mannering's eyes were filled once more with tears. The intolerable pity
+of the whole thing, its awful suddenness swept every other thought out of
+his mind. He remembered how anxiously she had tried to please him on that
+last night. He loathed himself for the cold brutality of his chilly
+affection. Hester came and knelt by his side, but she said nothing. So
+the hours passed.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2>BOOK IV</h2>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_Ic" id="CHAPTER_Ic"></a>CHAPTER I</h2>
+
+<h3>THE PERSISTENCY OF BORROWDEAN</h3>
+
+
+<p>"And what does Mannering think of it all, I wonder!" Lord Redford
+remarked, lighting a fresh cigarette. "This may be his opportunity, who
+can tell!"</p>
+
+<p>"Will he have the nerve to grasp it?" Borrowdean asked. "Mannering has
+never been proved in a crisis."</p>
+
+<p>"He may have the nerve. I should be more inclined to question the
+desire," Lord Redford said. "For a man in his position he has always
+seemed to me singularly unambitious. I don't think that the prospect of
+being Prime Minister would dazzle him in the least. It is part of the
+genius of the politician too, to know exactly when and how to seize an
+opportunity. I can imagine him watching it come, examining it through his
+eyeglass, and standing on one side with a shrug of the shoulders."</p>
+
+<p>"You do not believe, then," Berenice said, "that he is sufficiently in
+earnest to grasp it?"</p>
+
+<p>"Exactly," Lord Redford said. "I have that feeling about Mannering, I
+must admit, especially during the last two years. He seems to have drawn
+away from all of us, to live altogether too absorbed and self-contained
+a life for a man who has great ambitions to realize, or who is in
+downright earnest about his work."</p>
+
+<p>"What you all forget when you discuss Lawrence Mannering is this,"
+Berenice said. "He holds his position almost as a sacred charge. He is
+absolutely conscientious. He wants certain things for the sake of the
+people, and he will work steadily on until he gets them. I believe it is
+the truth that he has no personal ambition, but if the cause he has at
+heart is to be furthered at all it must be by his taking office.
+Therefore I think that when the time comes he will take it."</p>
+
+<p>"That sounds reasonable enough," Lord Redford admitted. "By the bye, did
+you notice that he is included in the house party at Sandringham again
+this week?"</p>
+
+<p>Anstruther, the youngest Cabinet Minister, and Lord Redford's nephew,
+joined in the conversation.</p>
+
+<p>"I can tell you something for a fact," he said. "My cousin is
+Lady-in-Waiting, and she's been up in town for a few days, and she asked
+me about Mannering. A Certain Personage thinks very highly of him indeed.
+Told some one that Mr. Mannering was the most statesman-like politician
+in the service of his country. I believe he'd sooner see Mannering Prime
+Minister than any one."</p>
+
+<p>"But he has no following," Borrowdean objected.</p>
+
+<p>"I think," Berenice said, slowly, "that he keeps as far aloof as possible
+for one reason, and one reason only. He avoids friendship, but he makes
+no enemies. He cultivates a neutral position whenever he can. What he is
+looking forward to, I am sure, is to found a coalition Government."</p>
+
+<p>"It is very possible," Lord Redford remarked. "I wonder if he will ask me
+to join."</p>
+
+<p>"Always selfish," Berenice laughed. "You men are all alike!"</p>
+
+<p>"On the contrary," Lord Redford answered, "my interest was purely
+patriotic. I cannot imagine the affairs of the country flourishing
+deprived of my valuable services. Let us go and wander through the
+crowd. Members of a Government in extremes like ours ought not to whisper
+together in corners. It gives rise to comment."</p>
+
+<p>Anstruther came hurrying up. He drew Redford on one side.</p>
+
+<p>"Mannering is here," he said, quietly. "Just arrived from Sandringham. He
+is looking for you."</p>
+
+<p>Almost as he spoke Mannering appeared. He did not at first see Berenice,
+and from the corner where she stood she watched him closely.</p>
+
+<p>It was two years since those few weeks at Bonestre, and during all that
+time they had scarcely met. Berenice knew that he had avoided her. For
+twelve months he had declined all social engagements, and since then he
+had pleaded the stress of political affairs as an excuse for leading the
+life almost of a recluse. Unseen herself, she studied him closely. He was
+much thinner, and every trace of his once healthy colouring had
+disappeared. His eyes seemed deeper set. There were streaks of grey in
+his hair. But for all that to her he was unaltered. He was still the one
+man in the world. She saw him shake hands with Lord Redford and draw him
+a little on one side.</p>
+
+<p>"Can you spare me five minutes?" he asked. "I have a matter to discuss
+with you."</p>
+
+<p>"Certainly!" Lord Redford answered. "I am leaving directly, and I might
+drive you home if you liked. We heard that you were at Sandringham."</p>
+
+<p>"I came up this afternoon," Mannering answered. "I heard that you were
+likely to be here, and as Lady Herrington had been kind enough to send me
+a card I came on."</p>
+
+<p>Lord Redford nodded.</p>
+
+<p>"Borrowdean and Anstruther are here too," he remarked. "We all felt in
+need of diversion. As you know very well, we're in a tight corner."</p>
+
+<p>Berenice came out from her place. At the sound of the rustling of her
+skirts both men turned their heads. She wore a gown of black velvet and a
+wonderful rope of pearls hung from her neck. She raised her hand and
+smiled at Mannering.</p>
+
+<p>"I am glad to see you again," she said, softly. "It is quite an age since
+we met, isn't it?"</p>
+
+<p>He held her hand for a moment. The touch of his fingers chilled her. He
+greeted her with quiet courtesy, but there was no answering smile upon
+his lips.</p>
+
+<p>"I have heard often of your movements from Clara," he said. "You have
+been very kind to her."</p>
+
+<p>"It has never occurred to me in that light," she said. "Clara needs a
+chaperon, and I need a companion. We were talking yesterday of going to
+Cairo for the winter. My only fear is that I am robbing you of your
+niece."</p>
+
+<p>"Please do not let that trouble you," he said. "Clara would be a most
+uncomfortable member of my household."</p>
+
+<p>"But are you never at all lonely?" she asked.</p>
+
+<p>"I never have time to think of such a thing," he answered. "Besides, I
+have Hester. She makes a wonderful secretary, and she seems to enjoy the
+work."</p>
+
+<p>"I should like to have a talk with you some time," she said. "Won't you
+come and see me?"</p>
+
+<p>He hesitated.</p>
+
+<p>"It is very kind of you to ask me," he said. "Don't think me churlish,
+but I go nowhere. I am trying to make up, you see, for my years of
+idleness."</p>
+
+<p>She looked at him steadfastly, and her heart sank. The change in
+his outward appearance seemed typical of some deeper and more final
+alteration in his whole nature. She felt herself powerless against the
+absolute impenetrability of his tone and manner. She felt that he had
+fought a battle within himself and conquered; that for some reason or
+other he had decided to walk no longer in the pleasanter paths of life.
+She had come to him unexpectedly, but he had shown no sign of emotion.
+Her influence over him seemed to be wholly a thing of the past. She made
+one more effort.</p>
+
+<p>"I think," she said, "that as one grows older one parts the less readily
+with the few friends who count. I hope that you will change your mind."</p>
+
+<p>He bowed gravely, but he made no answer. Berenice took Borrowdean's
+arm and passed on. There was a little spot of colour in her cheeks.
+Borrowdean felt nerved to his enterprise.</p>
+
+<p>"Let us go somewhere and sit down for a few minutes," he suggested. "The
+rooms are so hot this evening."</p>
+
+<p>She assented without words, and he found a solitary couch in one of the
+further apartments.</p>
+
+<p>"I wonder," he said, after a moment's pause, "whether I might say
+something to you, whether you would listen to me for a few minutes."</p>
+
+<p>Berenice was absorbed in her own thoughts. She allowed him to proceed.</p>
+
+<p>"For a good many years," he said, lowering his voice a little, "I have
+worked hard and done all I could to be successful. I wanted to have some
+sort of a position to offer. I am a Cabinet Minister now, and although I
+don't suppose we can last much longer this time, I shall have a place
+whenever we are in again."</p>
+
+<p>The sense of what he was saying began to dawn upon her. She stopped him
+at once.</p>
+
+<p>"Please do not say any more, Sir Leslie," she begged. "I should have
+given you credit for sufficient perception to have known beforehand the
+absolute impossibility of&mdash;of anything of the sort."</p>
+
+<p>"You are still a young woman," he said, quietly. "The world expects you
+to marry again."</p>
+
+<p>"I have no interest in what the world expects of me," she answered, "but
+I may tell you at once that my refusal has nothing whatever to do with
+the question of marriage in the abstract. You are a man of perception,
+Sir Leslie! It will be, I trust, sufficient if I say that I have no
+feelings whatever towards you which would induce me to consider the
+subject even for a moment."</p>
+
+<p>She was unchanged, then! This time he recognized the note of finality
+in her tone. All the time and thought he had given to this matter were
+wasted. He had failed, and he knew why. He seldom permitted himself the
+luxury of anger, but he felt all the poison of bitter hatred stirring
+within him at that moment, and craving for some sort of expression. There
+was nothing he could do, nothing he could say. But if Mannering had been
+within reach then he would have struck him. He rose and walked slowly
+away.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_IIc" id="CHAPTER_IIc"></a>CHAPTER II</h2>
+
+<h3>HESTER THINKS IT "A GREAT PITY"</h3>
+
+
+<p>"You will understand," Mannering said, as the brougham drove off, "that
+you and I are speaking together merely as friends. I have nothing
+official to say to you. It would be presumption on my part to assume that
+the time is ripe for anything definite while you are still at the head of
+an unbeaten Government. But one learns to read the signs of the times.
+I think that you and I both know that you cannot last the session."</p>
+
+<p>"It is a positive luxury at times," Redford answered, "to be able to
+indulge in absolute candour. We cannot last the session. You pulled us
+through our last tight corner, but we shall part, I suppose, on the New
+Tenement Bill, and then we shall come a cropper."</p>
+
+<p>Mannering nodded.</p>
+
+<p>"The Opposition," he said, "are not strong enough to form a Government
+alone. And I do not think that a one-man Cabinet would be popular. It
+has been suggested to me that at no time in political history have the
+conditions been more favourable for a really strong coalition Government,
+containing men of moderate views on both sides. I am anxious to know
+whether you would be willing to join such a combination."</p>
+
+<p>"Under whom?" Lord Redford asked.</p>
+
+<p>"Under myself," Mannering answered, gravely. "Don't think me
+over-presumptuous. The matter has been very carefully thought out. You
+could not serve under Rushleigh, nor could he serve under you. But you
+could both be invaluable members of a Cabinet of which I was the nominal
+head. I do not wish to entrap you into consent, however, without your
+fully understanding this: a modified, and to a certain extent an
+experimental, scheme of tariff reform would be part of our programme."</p>
+
+<p>"You wish for a reply," Lord Redford said, "only in general terms?"</p>
+
+<p>"Only in general terms, of course," Mannering assented.</p>
+
+<p>"Then you may take it," Lord Redford said, "that I should be proud to
+become a member of such a Government. Anything would be better than a
+fourth-party administration with Imperialism on the brain and rank
+Protection on their programme. They might do mischief which it would take
+centuries to undo."</p>
+
+<p>"We understand one another, Lord Redford," Mannering said, simply. "I am
+very much obliged to you. This is my turning."</p>
+
+<p>Mannering, when he found himself alone in his study, drew a little sigh
+of relief. He flung himself into an easy-chair, and sat with his hands
+pressed against his temples. The events of the day, from the morning at
+Sandringham to his recent conversation with Lord Redford, were certainly
+of sufficiently exciting a nature to provide him with food for thought.
+And yet his mind was full of one thing only, this chance meeting with
+Berenice. It was wonderful to him that she should have changed so little.
+He himself felt that the last two years were equal to a decade, that
+events on the other side of that line with which his life was riven were
+events with which some other person was concerned, certainly not the
+Lawrence Mannering of to-day. And yet he knew now that the battle which
+he had fought was far from a final one. Her power over him was unchanged.
+He was face to face once more with the old problem. His life was sworn to
+the service of the people. He had crowded his days with thoughts and
+deeds and plans for them. Almost every personal luxury and pleasure had
+been abnegated. He had found a sort of fierce delight in the asceticism
+of his daily life, in the unflinching firmness with which he had barred
+the gates which might lead him into smoother and happier ways. To-night
+he was beset with a sudden fear. He rose and looked at himself in the
+glass. He was pale and wan. His face lacked the robust vitality of a few
+years ago. He was ageing fast. He was conscious of certain disquieting
+symptoms in the routine of his daily life. He threw himself back into the
+chair with a little groan. The mockery of his life of ceaseless toil
+seemed suddenly to spread itself out before him, a grim and unlovely
+jest. What if his strength should go? What if all this labour and
+self-denial should be in vain? He found himself growing giddy at the
+thought.</p>
+
+<p>He rang the bell and ordered wine. Then he went to the telephone and rang
+up a doctor who lived near. Very soon, with coat and waistcoat off, he
+was going through a somewhat prolonged examination. Afterwards the doctor
+sat down opposite to him and accepted a cigar.</p>
+
+<p>"What made you send for me this evening?" he asked, curiously.</p>
+
+<p>Mannering hesitated.</p>
+
+<p>"An impulse," he said. "To-morrrow I should have no time to come to
+you. I wasn't feeling quite myself, and it is possible that I may be
+undertaking some very important work before long."</p>
+
+<p>"I shouldn't if I were you," the doctor remarked, quietly.</p>
+
+<p>"The work is of such a nature," Mannering said, "that I could not refuse
+it. It may not come, but if it does I must go through with it."</p>
+
+<p>"I doubt whether you will succeed," the doctor said. "There is nothing
+the matter with you except that you have been drawing on your reserve
+stock of strength to such an extent that you are on the verge of a
+collapse. The longer you stave it off the more complete it will be."</p>
+
+<p>"You are a Job's comforter," Mannering remarked, with a smile. "Send me
+some physic, and I will take things as easy as I can."</p>
+
+<p>"I'll send you some," the doctor answered, "but it won't do you much
+good. What you want is rest and amusement."</p>
+
+<p>Mannering laughed, and showed him out. When he returned to his study
+Hester was there, just returned from a visit to the theatre with some
+friends. She threw off her wrap and looked through the letters which had
+come by the evening's post.</p>
+
+<p>"Did you see this from Richard Fardell?" she asked him. "Parkins is dead
+at last. Fardell says that he has been quite childish for the last
+eighteen months! Are you ill?" she broke off, suddenly.</p>
+
+<p>Mannering, who was lying back in his easy-chair, white almost to the
+lips, roused himself with an effort. He poured out a glass of wine and
+drank it off.</p>
+
+<p>"I'm not ill," he said, with rather a weak smile, "but I'm a little
+tired."</p>
+
+<p>"Who was your visitor?" she asked.</p>
+
+<p>"A doctor. I felt a little run down, so I sent for him. Of course he told
+me the usual story. Rest and a holiday."</p>
+
+<p>She came and sat on the arm of his chair. Every year she grew less and
+less like her mother. Her hair was smoothly brushed back from her
+forehead, and her features were distinctly intellectual. She was by far
+the best secretary Mannering had ever had.</p>
+
+<p>"You need some one to look after you," she said, decisively.</p>
+
+<p>"It seems to me that you do that pretty well," he answered. "I don't want
+any one else."</p>
+
+<p>"You need some one with more authority than I have," she said. "You ought
+to marry."</p>
+
+<p>"Marry!" he gasped.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes."</p>
+
+<p>"Any particular person?"</p>
+
+<p>"Of course! You know whom."</p>
+
+<p>Mannering did not reply at once. He was looking steadfastly into the
+fire, and the gloom in his face was unlightened.</p>
+
+<p>"Hester," he said, at last, in a very low tone, "I will tell you, if you
+like, a short, a very short chapter of my life. It lasted a few hours, a
+day or so, more or less. Yet of course it has made a difference always."</p>
+
+<p>"I should like to hear it," she whispered.</p>
+
+<p>"The two great events of my life," he said, "came together. I was engaged
+to be married to the Duchess of Lenchester at the same time that I found
+myself forced to sever my connexion with the Liberal party. You know, of
+course, that the Duchess has always been a great figure in politics. She
+has ambitions, and her political creed is almost a part of the religion
+of her life. She looked upon my apostasy with horror. It came between us
+at the very moment when I thought that I had found in life the one great
+and beautiful thing."</p>
+
+<p>"If ever she let it come between you," Hester interrupted, softly, "I
+believe that she has repented. We women are quick to find out those
+things, you know," she added, "and I am sure that I am right. She has
+never married any one else. I do not believe that she ever will."</p>
+
+<p>"It is too late," Mannering said. "A union between us now could only lead
+to unhappiness. The disintegration of parties is slowly commencing, and I
+think that the next few years will find me still further apart than I am
+to-day from my old friends. Berenice"&mdash;he slipped so easily into calling
+her so&mdash;"is heart and soul with them."</p>
+
+<p>"At least," Hester said, "I think that for both your sakes you should
+give her the opportunity of choosing."</p>
+
+<p>"Even that," he said, "would not be wise. We are man and woman still, you
+see, Hester, and there are moments when sentiment is strong enough to
+triumph over principle and sweep our minds bare of all the every-day
+thoughts. But afterwards&mdash;there is always the afterwards. The conflict
+must come. Reason stays with us always, and sentiment might weaken with
+the years."</p>
+
+<p>She shook her head.</p>
+
+<p>"The Duchess is a woman," she said, "and the hold of all other things
+grows weak when she loves. Give her the chance."</p>
+
+<p>"Don't!" Mannering exclaimed, almost sharply. "You can't see this matter
+as I do. I have vowed my life now. I have seen my duty, and I have kept
+my face turned steadily towards it. Once I was contented with very
+different things, and I think that I came as near happiness then as a man
+often does. But those days have gone by. They have left a whole world of
+delightful memories, but I have locked the doors of the past behind me."</p>
+
+<p>Hester shook her head.</p>
+
+<p>"You are making a mistake," she said. "Two people who love one another,
+and who are honest in their opinions, find happiness sooner or later if
+they have the courage to seek for it. Don't you know," she continued,
+after a moment's pause, "that&mdash;she understood? I always like to think
+what I believe to be the truth. She went away to leave you free."</p>
+
+<p>Mannering rose to his feet and pointed to the clock.</p>
+
+<p>"It is time that you and I were in bed, Hester," he said. "Remember that
+we have a busy morning."</p>
+
+<p>"It seems a pity," she murmured, as she wished him good-night. "A great
+pity!"</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_IIIc" id="CHAPTER_IIIc"></a>CHAPTER III</h2>
+
+<h3>SUMMONED TO WINDSOR</h3>
+
+
+<p>Berenice, who had just returned from making a call, was standing in the
+hall, glancing through the cards displayed upon a small round table. The
+major-domo of her household came hurrying out from his office.</p>
+
+<p>"There is a young lady, your Grace," he announced, "who has been waiting
+to see you for half an hour. Her name is Miss Phillimore."</p>
+
+<p>"Where is she?" Berenice asked.</p>
+
+<p>"In the library, your Grace."</p>
+
+<p>"Show her into my own room," Berenice said, "I will see her at once."</p>
+
+<p>Hester was a little nervous, but Berenice set her immediately at her ease
+by the graciousness of her manner. They talked for some time of Bonestre.
+Then there was a moment's pause. Hester summoned up her courage.</p>
+
+<p>"I am afraid," she said, "that you may consider what I am going to say
+rather a liberty. I've thought it all out, and I decided to come to you.
+I couldn't see any other way."</p>
+
+<p>Berenice smiled encouragingly.</p>
+
+<p>"I will promise you," she said, "that I will consider it nothing of the
+sort."</p>
+
+<p>"That is very kind of you," Hester said. "I have come here because Mr.
+Mannering is the greatest friend I have in the world. He stands to me for
+all the relatives most girls have, and I am very fond of him indeed. I
+scarcely remember my father, but Mr. Mannering was always kind to me when
+I was a child. You know, perhaps, that I am living with him now as his
+secretary?"</p>
+
+<p>Berenice nodded pleasantly.</p>
+
+<p>"I see him every day," Hester continued, "and I notice things. He has
+changed a great deal during the last few years. I am getting very anxious
+about him."</p>
+
+<p>"He is not ill, I hope?" Berenice asked. "I too noticed a change. It
+grieved me very much."</p>
+
+<p>"He is simply working himself to death," Hester continued, "without
+relaxation or pleasure of any sort. And all the time he is unhappy. Other
+men, however hard they work, have their hobbies and their occasional
+holidays. He has neither. And I think that I know why. He fights all the
+time to forget."</p>
+
+<p>"To forget what?" Berenice asked, slowly turning her head.</p>
+
+<p>"To forget how near he came once to being very happy," Hester answered,
+boldly. "To forget&mdash;you!"</p>
+
+<p>Then her heart sang a little song of triumph, for she saw the instant
+change in the still, cold face turned now a little away from her. She saw
+the proud lips tremble and the unmistakable light leap out from the dark
+eyes. She saw the colour rush into the cheeks, and she had no more fear.
+She rose from her chair and dropped on one knee by Berenice's side.</p>
+
+<p>"Make him happy, please," she begged. "You can do it. You only! He loves
+you!"</p>
+
+<p>Berenice smiled, although her eyes were wet with tears. She laid her
+long, delicate fingers upon the other's hand.</p>
+
+<p>"But, my dear child," she protested, "what can I do? Mr. Mannering won't
+come near me. He won't even write to me. I can't take him by storm, can
+I?"</p>
+
+<p>"He is so foolish," Hester said, also smiling. "He will not understand
+how unimportant all other things are when two people care for one
+another. He talks about the difference in your politics, as though that
+were sufficient to keep you apart!"</p>
+
+<p>Berenice was silent for a moment.</p>
+
+<p>"There was a time," she said, softly, "when I thought so, too."</p>
+
+<p>"Exactly!" Hester declared. "And he doesn't know, of course, that you
+don't think so now."</p>
+
+<p>Berenice smiled slightly.</p>
+
+<p>"You must remember, dear," she said, "that Mr. Mannering and I are in
+rather a peculiar position. My great-grandfather, my father and my uncle
+were all Prime Ministers of England, and they were all staunch Liberals.
+My family has always taken its politics very seriously indeed, and so
+have I. It is not a little thing, this, after all."</p>
+
+<p>"But you will do it!" Hester exclaimed. "I am sure that you will."</p>
+
+<p>Berenice rose to her feet. A sense of excitement was suddenly quivering
+in her veins, her heart was beating fiercely. After all, this child
+was wise. She had been drifting into the dull, passionless life of a
+middle-aged woman. All the joys of youth seemed suddenly to be sweeping
+up from her heart, mocking the serenity of her days, these stagnant days,
+sheltered from the great winds of life, where the waves were ripples and
+the hours changeless. She raised her arms for a moment and dropped them
+to her side.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, I do not know!" she cried. "It is such an upheaval. If he were
+here&mdash;if he asked me himself. But he will never come now."</p>
+
+<p>"I believe that he would come to-morrow," Hester said, "if he were
+sure&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>Berenice laughed softly. There was colour in her cheeks as she turned to
+Hester.</p>
+
+<p>"Tell him to come and have tea with me to-morrow afternoon," she said. "I
+shall be quite alone."</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>Hester felt all her confidence slipping away from her. The echoes of her
+breathless, passionate words had scarcely died away, and Mannering, to
+all appearance, was unmoved. His still, cold face showed no signs of
+agitation, his dark, beringed eyes were full of nothing but an intense
+weariness.</p>
+
+<p>"Do I understand, Hester," he asked, "that you have been to see the
+Duchess?&mdash;that you have spoken of these things to her?"</p>
+
+<p>Her heart sank. His tone was almost censorious. Nevertheless, she stood
+her ground.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes! I have told you the truth. And I am glad that I went. You are very
+clever people, both of you, but you are spoiling your lives for the sake
+of a little common sense. It was necessary for some one to interfere."</p>
+
+<p>Mannering shook his head slowly.</p>
+
+<p>"You meant kindly, Hester," he said, "but it was a mistake. The time when
+that might have been possible has gone by. Neither she nor I can call
+back the hand of time. The last two years have made an old man of me. I
+have no longer my enthusiasm. I am in the whirlpool, and I must fight my
+way through to the end."</p>
+
+<p>She sat at his feet. He was still in the easy-chair into which he had
+sunk on his first coming into the room. He had been speaking in the House
+late, amidst all the excitement of a political crisis.</p>
+
+<p>"Why fight alone," she murmured, "when she is willing to come to you?"</p>
+
+<p>He shook his head.</p>
+
+<p>"There would be conditions," he said, "and she would not understand. I
+may be in office in a month with most of her friends in opposition. The
+situation would be impossible!"</p>
+
+<p>"Rubbish!" Hester declared. "The Duchess is too great a woman to lose so
+utterly her sense of proportion. Don't you understand&mdash;that she loves
+you?"</p>
+
+<p>Mannering laughed bitterly.</p>
+
+<p>"She must love a shadow, then!" he said, "for the man she knew does not
+exist any longer. Poor little girl, are you disappointed?" he added, more
+kindly. "I am sorry!"</p>
+
+<p>"I am disappointed to hear you talking like this," she declared. "I will
+not believe that it is more than a mood. You are overtired, perhaps!"</p>
+
+<p>"Ay!" he said. "But I have been overtired for a long time. The strength
+the gods give us lasts a weary while. You must send my excuses to the
+Duchess, Hester. The fates are leading me another way."</p>
+
+<p>"I won't do it," she sobbed. "You shall be reasonable! I will make you
+go!"</p>
+
+<p>He shook his head.</p>
+
+<p>"If you could," he murmured, "you might alter the writing on one little
+page of history. We defeated the Government to-night badly, and I am
+going to Windsor to-morrow afternoon."</p>
+
+<p>Hester rose to her feet and paced the room restlessly. Mannering had
+spoken without exultation. His pallid face seemed to her to have grown
+thin and hard. He saw himself the possible Prime Minister of the morrow
+without the slightest suggestion of any sort of gratified ambition.</p>
+
+<p>"I don't know whether to say that I am glad or not," Hester declared,
+stopping once more by his side. "If you are going to shut yourself off
+from everything else in life which makes for happiness, to forget that
+you are a man, and turn yourself into a law-making machine, well, then,
+I am sorry. I think that your success will be a curse to you. I think
+that you will live to regret it."</p>
+
+<p>Mannering looked at her for a moment with a gleam of his old self shining
+out of his eyes. A sudden pathos, a wave of self-pity had softened his
+face.</p>
+
+<p>"Dear child!" he said, gravely, "I cannot make you understand. I carry
+a burden from which no one can free me. For good or for evil the powers
+that be have set my feet in the path of the climbers, and for the sake of
+those whose sufferings I have seen I must struggle upwards to the end.
+Berenice and the Duchess of Lenchester are two very different persons. I
+cannot take one into my life without the other. It is because I love her,
+Hester, that I let her go. Good-night, child!"</p>
+
+<p>She kissed his hand and went slowly to her room, stumbling upstairs
+through a mist of tears. There was nothing more that she could do.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_IVc" id="CHAPTER_IVc"></a>CHAPTER IV</h2>
+
+<h3>CHECKMATE TO BORROWDEAN</h3>
+
+
+<p>Mannering's town house, none too large at any time, was transformed into
+a little hive of industry. Two hurriedly appointed secretaries were at
+work in the dining-room, and Hester was busy typing in her own little
+sanctum.</p>
+
+<p>Mannering sat in his study before a table covered with papers, and for
+the first time during the day was alone for a few moments.</p>
+
+<p>His servant brought in a card. Mannering glanced at it and frowned.</p>
+
+<p>"The gentleman said that he would not keep you for more than a moment,
+sir," the servant announced quietly, mindful of the half-sovereign which
+had been slipped into his hand.</p>
+
+<p>Mannering still looked at the card doubtfully.</p>
+
+<p>"You can show him up," he said at last.</p>
+
+<p>"Very good, sir!"</p>
+
+<p>The man withdrew, and reappeared to usher in Sir Leslie Borrowdean.
+Mannering greeted him without offering his hand.</p>
+
+<p>"You wished to see me, Sir Leslie?" he asked.</p>
+
+<p>Borrowdean came slowly into the room. He closed the door behind him.</p>
+
+<p>"I hope," he said, "that you will not consider my presence an intrusion!"</p>
+
+<p>"You have business with me, I presume," Mannering answered, coldly. "Pray
+sit down."</p>
+
+<p>Borrowdean ignored the chair, towards which Mannering had motioned. He
+came and stood by the side of the table.</p>
+
+<p>"Unless your memory, Mannering," he said, with a hard little laugh, "is
+as short as the proverbial politician's, you can scarcely be surprised at
+my visit."</p>
+
+<p>Mannering raised his eyebrows, and said nothing.</p>
+
+<p>"I must confess," Borrowdean continued, "that I scarcely expected to find
+it necessary for me to come here and remind you that it was I who am
+responsible for your reappearance in politics."</p>
+
+<p>"I am not likely," Mannering said, slowly, "to forget your good offices
+in that respect."</p>
+
+<p>"I felt sure that you would not," Borrowdean answered. "Yet you must not
+altogether blame me for my coming! I understand that the list of your
+proposed Cabinet is to be completed to-morrow afternoon, and as yet I
+have heard nothing from you."</p>
+
+<p>"Your information," Mannering said, "is quite correct. In fact, my list
+is complete already. If your visit here is one of curiosity, I have no
+objection to gratify it. Here is a list of the names I have selected."</p>
+
+<p>He handed a sheet of paper to Borrowdean, who glanced it eagerly down.
+Afterwards he looked up and met Mannering's calm gaze. There was an
+absolute silence for several seconds.</p>
+
+<p>"My name," Borrowdean said, hoarsely, "is not amongst these!"</p>
+
+<p>"It really never occurred to me for a single second to place it there,"
+Mannering answered.</p>
+
+<p>Borrowdean drew a little breath. He was deathly pale.</p>
+
+<p>"You include Redford," he said. "He is a more violent partizan than I
+have ever been. I have heard you say a dozen times that you disapprove of
+turning a man out of office directly he has got into the swing of it. Has
+any one any fault to find with me? I have done my duty, and done it
+thoroughly. I don't know what your programme may be, but if Redford can
+accept it I am sure that I can."</p>
+
+<p>"Possibly," Mannering answered. "I have this peculiarity, though. Call it
+a whim, if you like. I desire to see my Cabinet composed of honourable
+men."</p>
+
+<p>Borrowdean started back as though he had received a blow.</p>
+
+<p>"Am I to accept that as a statement of your opinion of me?" he demanded.</p>
+
+<p>"It seems fairly obvious," Mannering answered, "that such was my
+intention."</p>
+
+<p>"You owe your place in public life to me," Borrowdean exclaimed.</p>
+
+<p>"If I do," Mannering answered, "do you imagine that I consider myself
+your debtor? I tell you that to-day, at this moment, I have no political
+ambitions. Before you appeared at Blakely and commenced your underhand
+scheming, I was a contented, almost a happy man. You imagined that my
+reappearance in political life would be beneficial to you, and with that
+in view, and that only, you set yourself to get me back. You succeeded!
+We won't say how! If you are disappointed with the result what concern
+is that of mine? You have called yourself my friend. I have not for some
+time considered you as such. I owe you nothing. I have no feeling for
+you save one of contempt. To me you figure as the modern political
+adventurer, living on his wits and the credulity of other people. Better
+see how it will pay you in opposition."</p>
+
+<p>Borrowdean, a cold-blooded and calculating man, knew for the first time
+in his life what it was to let his passions govern him. Every word which
+this man had spoken was truth, and therefore all the more bitter to hear.
+He saw himself beaten and humiliated, outwitted by the man whom he had
+sought to make his tool. A slow paroxysm of anger held him rigid. He was
+white to the lips. His nerves and senses were all tingling. There was red
+fire before his eyes.</p>
+
+<p>"If your business with me is ended," Mannering said, waving his hand
+towards the door, "you will forgive me if I remind you that I am much
+occupied."</p>
+
+<p>Borrowdean snatched up the square glass paper cutter from the table, and
+without a second's warning he struck Mannering with it full upon the
+temple.</p>
+
+<p>"Damn you!" he said.</p>
+
+<p>Mannering tried to struggle to his feet, but collapsed, and fell upon the
+floor. Borrowdean kicked his prostrate body.</p>
+
+<p>"Now go and form your Cabinet," he muttered. "May you wake in hell!"</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>Borrowdean, who left the study a madman, was a sane person the moment
+he began to descend the stairs and found himself face to face with a
+tall, heavily cloaked woman. The flash of familiar jewels in her hair,
+something, perhaps, in the quiet stateliness of her movements, betrayed
+her identity to him. His heart gave a quick jump. A sickening fear stole
+over him. He barred the way.</p>
+
+<p>"Duchess!" he exclaimed.</p>
+
+<p>She waved him aside with an impatient gesture. He could see the frown
+gathering upon her face.</p>
+
+<p>"Sir Leslie!" she replied. "Please let me pass! I want to see Mr.
+Mannering before any one else goes up!"</p>
+
+<p>Sir Leslie drew immediately to one side.</p>
+
+<p>"Pray do not let me detain you," he said, coolly. "Between ourselves, I
+do not think that Mannering is in a fit state to see anybody. I have not
+been able to get a coherent word out of him. He walks all the time
+backwards and forwards like a man demented."</p>
+
+<p>Berenice smiled slightly.</p>
+
+<p>"You are annoyed," she declared, "because you will be in opposition once
+more!"</p>
+
+<p>"If I go into opposition again," Borrowdean answered, "it will be my own
+choice. Mannering has asked me to join his Cabinet."</p>
+
+<p>Berenice raised her eyebrows. Her surprise was genuine.</p>
+
+<p>"You amaze me!" she declared.</p>
+
+<p>"I was amazed myself," he answered.</p>
+
+<p>She passed on her way, and Borrowdean descending, took a cab quietly
+home. Berenice, with her hand upon the door, hesitated. Hester had
+purposely sent her up alone. They had waited until they had heard
+Borrowdean leave the room. And now at the last moment she hesitated. She
+was a proud woman. She was departing now, for his sake, from the
+conventions of a lifetime. He had declined to come to her; no matter, she
+had come to him instead. Suppose&mdash;he should not be glad? Suppose she
+should fail to see in his face her justification? It was very quiet in
+the room. She could not even hear the scratching of his pen. Twice her
+fingers closed upon the knob of the door, and twice she hesitated. If it
+had not been for facing Hester below she would probably have gone
+silently away.</p>
+
+<p>And then&mdash;she heard a sound. It was not at all the sort of sound for
+which she had been listening, but it brought her hesitation to a sudden
+end. She threw open the door, and a little cry of amazement broke from
+her trembling lips. It was indeed a groan which she had heard. Mannering
+was stretched upon the floor, his eyes half closed, his face ghastly
+white. For a moment she stood motionless, a whole torrent of arrested
+speech upon her quivering lips. Then she dropped on her knees by his side
+and lifted his cold hand.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, my love!" she murmured. "My love!"</p>
+
+<p>But he made no sign. Then she stood up, and her cry of horror rang
+through the house.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_Vc" id="CHAPTER_Vc"></a>CHAPTER V</h2>
+
+<h3>A BRAZEN PROCEEDING</h3>
+
+
+<p>Mannering opened his eyes lazily. His companion had stopped suddenly in
+his reading. He appeared to be examining a certain paragraph in the paper
+with much interest. Mannering stretched out his hand for a match, and
+relit his cigarette.</p>
+
+<p>"Read it out, Richard," he said. "Don't mind me."</p>
+
+<p>The young man started slightly.</p>
+
+<p>"I am very sorry, sir," he said. "I thought that you were asleep!"</p>
+
+<p>Mannering smiled.</p>
+
+<p>"What about the paragraph?" he asked.</p>
+
+<p>"It is just this," Richard answered, reading. "'The Duchess of Lenchester
+and Miss Clara Mannering have arrived at Claridge's from the South of
+Italy.'"</p>
+
+<p>Mannering looked at him keenly.</p>
+
+<p>"I am curious to know which part of that announcement you find so
+interesting," he said.</p>
+
+<p>"Certainly not the latter part, sir," the young man answered. "I thought
+perhaps you would have noticed&mdash;I meant to speak to you as soon as you
+were a little stronger&mdash;I have asked Hester to be my wife!"</p>
+
+<p>"Then all I can say," Mannering declared, gravely, "is, that you are a
+remarkably sensible young man. I am quite strong enough to bear a shock
+of that sort."</p>
+
+<p>"I'm very glad to hear you say so, sir," Richard said. "Of course I
+shouldn't think of taking her away until you were quite yourself again."</p>
+
+<p>"The cheek of the young man!" Mannering murmured. "She wouldn't go!"</p>
+
+<p>"I don't believe she would," Richard laughed. "Of course we consider that
+you are very nearly well now."</p>
+
+<p>"You can consider what you like," Mannering answered, "but I shall remain
+an invalid as long as it pleases me."</p>
+
+<p>Hester appeared on the upper lawn, and Richard rose up at once.</p>
+
+<p>"If you don't mind, sir," he said, "I think that I should like to go and
+tell Hester that I have spoken to you."</p>
+
+<p>Mannering nodded. He watched the two young people stroll off together
+towards the rose-garden, talking earnestly. He heard the little iron gate
+open and close. He watched them disappear behind the hedge of laurels. A
+puff of breeze brought the faint odour of roses to him, and with it a
+sudden host of memories. His eyes grew wistful. He felt something tugging
+at his heartstrings. Only a few years ago life here had seemed so
+wonderful a thing&mdash;only a few years, but with all the passions and
+struggles of a lifetime crowded into them. The maelstrom was there still,
+but he himself had crept out of it. What was there left? Peace, haunted
+with memories, rest, troubled by desire. He heard the sound of their
+voices in the rose-garden, and he turned away with a pain in his heart of
+which he was ashamed. These things were for the young! If youth had
+passed him by, still there were compensations!</p>
+
+<p>Compensations, aye&mdash;but he wanted none of them! He picked up the
+newspaper, and with a little difficulty, for his sight was not yet good,
+found a certain paragraph. Then the paper slipped again from his fingers,
+and he heard the sweeping of a woman's dress across the smooth-shaven
+lawn. He gripped the sides of his chair and set his teeth hard. He
+struggled to rise, but she moved swiftly up to him with a gesture of
+remonstrance.</p>
+
+<p>"Please don't move," she exclaimed, as though her coming were the most
+natural thing in the world. "I am going to sit down with you, if I may!"</p>
+
+<p>He murmured an expression of conventional delight. She wore a dress of
+some soft white material, and her figure was as wonderful as ever. He
+recovered himself almost at once and studied her admiringly.</p>
+
+<p>"Paris?" he murmured.</p>
+
+<p>"Paquin!" she answered. "I remembered that you liked me in white."</p>
+
+<p>"But where on earth have you come from?" he asked.</p>
+
+<p>"The Farm," she answered. "I'm going to take it for three months&mdash;if
+you're decent to me!"</p>
+
+<p>"That rascal Richard!" he muttered. "Never told me a word! Pretended to
+be surprised when he heard you and Clara were back."</p>
+
+<p>She nodded.</p>
+
+<p>"Clara is going to marry that Frenchman next month," she said, "and I
+shall be looking for another companion. Do you know of one?"</p>
+
+<p>"I haven't another niece," he answered.</p>
+
+<p>"Even if you had," she said, "I have come to the conclusion that I want
+something different. Will you listen to me patiently for a moment?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes."</p>
+
+<p>"Will you marry me, please?" she said. "No, don't interrupt. I want there
+to be no misunderstandings this time. I don't care whether you are an
+invalid or not. I don't care whether you are going back into politics or
+not. I don't care whether we live here or in any other corner of the
+world. You can call yourself anything, from an anarchist to a Tory&mdash;or be
+anything. You can have all your workingmen here to dinner in flannel
+shirts, if you like, and I'll play bowls with their wives on the lawn.
+Nothing matters but this one thing, Lawrence. Will you marry me&mdash;and try
+to care a little?"</p>
+
+<p>"This is absolutely," Mannering declared, taking her into his arms, "the
+most brazen proceeding!"</p>
+
+<p>"It's a good deal better than the bungle we made of it before," she
+murmured.</p>
+
+
+<p>THE END</p>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<h2><a name="E_Phillips_Oppenheims_Novels" id="E_Phillips_Oppenheims_Novels"></a>E. Phillips Oppenheim's Novels</h2>
+
+
+<p>A PRINCE OF SINNERS</p>
+
+<p>Thoroughly matured, brilliantly constructed, and convincingly
+told.&mdash;<i>London Times</i>.</p>
+
+<p>It is rare that so much knowledge of the world, taken as a whole, is
+set between two covers of a novel.&mdash;<i>Chicago Daily News</i>.</p>
+
+
+<p>ANNA THE ADVENTURESS</p>
+
+<p>A story of London life that is at once unusual, original, consistent,
+and delightful.&mdash;<i>Buffalo Express</i>.</p>
+
+<p>An entrancing story which has seldom been surpassed as a study of
+feminine character and sentiment.&mdash;<i>Outlook</i>, London.</p>
+
+
+<p>ENOCH STRONE</p>
+
+<p>In no other novel has Mr. Oppenheim created such life-like characters
+or handled his plot with such admirable force and restraint as in this
+capital story of the career of masterful Enoch Strone.</p>
+
+
+<p>A SLEEPING MEMORY</p>
+
+<p>A story in occultism, but with all its mysticism and its dealings with
+the unknowable the book is never dull, the thread of the human story
+in it is never lost sight of for a moment.&mdash;<i>Boston Transcript</i>.</p>
+
+
+<p>MYSTERIOUS MR. SABIN</p>
+
+<p>Emphatically a good story&mdash;strong, bold, original, and admirably
+told.&mdash;<i>Literature</i>, London.</p>
+
+<p>Intensely readable for the dramatic force with which the story is
+told, the absolute originality of the underlying creative thought, and
+the strength of all the men and women who fill the pages.&mdash;<i>Pittsburgh
+Times</i>.</p>
+
+
+<p>THE YELLOW CRAYON</p>
+
+<p><i>Containing the Further Adventures of "Mysterious
+Mr. Sabin"</i></p>
+
+<p>The efforts of Mr. Sabin, one of Mr. Oppenheim's most fascinating
+characters, to free his wife from an entanglement with the Order of
+the Yellow Crayon, give the author one of his most complicated and
+absorbing plots. A number of the characters of "Mysterious Mr.
+Sabin" figure in this delightful work.</p>
+
+
+<p>THE TRAITORS</p>
+
+<p>A brilliant and engrossing story of love and adventure and Russian
+political intrigue. A revolution, the recall of an exiled king, the
+defence of his dominion against Turkish aggression, furnish a series
+of exciting pictures and dramatic situations.</p>
+
+
+<p>THE BETRAYAL</p>
+
+<p>In none of Mr. Oppenheim's fascinating and absorbing books has
+he better illustrated his remarkable faculty for holding the reader's
+interest to the end than in "The Betrayal." The efforts of the
+French Secret Service to obtain important papers relating to the
+Coast Defence of England are the <i>motif</i> of its remarkable plot.</p>
+
+
+<p>A MILLIONAIRE OF YESTERDAY</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Oppenheim has never written a better story than "A Millionaire
+of Yesterday." He grips the reader's attention at the start by
+his vivid picture of the two men in the West African bush making a
+grim fight for life and fortune, and he holds it to the finish. The
+volume is thrilling throughout, while the style is excellent.</p>
+
+
+<p>THE MAN AND HIS KINGDOM</p>
+
+<p>This brilliant, nervous, and intensely dramatic tale of love, intrigue,
+and revolution in a South American State is so human and life-like
+that the reader is bewildered by the writer's evident daring, and his
+equal fidelity to things as they are.</p>
+
+
+<p>THE LOST LEADER</p>
+
+<p>As fascinating a story of modern life as a novelist has yet conceived
+and one that arrests the mind by its fine strenuousness of purpose.</p>
+
+
+<p>THE MALEFACTOR</p>
+
+<p>This amazing story of the strange revenge of Sir Wingrave Seton,
+who suffered imprisonment for a crime he did not commit rather than
+defend himself at a woman's expense, "will make the most languid
+alive with expectant interest," says the <i>Chicago Record-Herald</i>.</p>
+
+
+<p>A MAKER OF HISTORY</p>
+
+<p>A story of absorbing interest turning on a complicated plot worked
+out with dexterous craftsmanship. A capital yarn of European secret
+service.&mdash;<i>Literary Digest</i>.</p>
+
+
+<p>THE MASTER MUMMER</p>
+
+<p>Will be found of absorbing interest to those who love a story of
+action and romance.&mdash;<i>Academy</i>, London.</p>
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<hr class="full" />
+<p>***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK A LOST LEADER***</p>
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+The Project Gutenberg eBook, A Lost Leader, by E. Phillips Oppenheim,
+Illustrated by Fred Pegram
+
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+
+
+
+Title: A Lost Leader
+
+
+Author: E. Phillips Oppenheim
+
+
+
+Release Date: November 14, 2005 [eBook #17063]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-646-US (US-ASCII)
+
+
+***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK A LOST LEADER***
+
+
+E-text prepared by Suzanne Shell, Mary Meehan, and the Project Gutenberg
+Online Distributed Proofreading Team (https://www.pgdp.net/)
+
+
+
+Note: Project Gutenberg also has an HTML version of this
+ file which includes the original illustrations.
+ See 16945-h.htm or 16945-h.zip:
+ (https://www.gutenberg.org/dirs/1/7/0/6/16945/16945-h/16945-h.htm)
+ or
+ (https://www.gutenberg.org/dirs/1/7/0/6/16945/16945-h.zip)
+
+
+
+
+
+A LOST LEADER
+
+by
+
+E. PHILLIPS OPPENHEIM
+
+Author of "A Maker of History," "Mysterious Mr. Sabin," "The Master
+Mummer," "Anna the Adventuress," Etc.
+
+Illustrated by Fred Pegram
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+Boston
+Little, Brown & Company
+
+1907
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+
+BOOK I
+
+Chapter
+
+ I Reconstruction
+
+ II The Woman with an Alias
+
+ III Wanted--A Politician
+
+ IV The Duchess Asks a Question
+
+ V The Hesitation of Mr. Mannering
+
+ VI Sacrifice
+
+ VII The Duchess's "At Home"
+
+VIII The Mannering Mystery
+
+ IX The Pumping of Mrs. Phillimore
+
+ X The Man with a Motive
+
+ XI Mannering's Alternative
+
+
+BOOK II
+
+
+ I Borrowdean makes a Bargain
+
+ II "Cherchez la Femme"
+
+ III One of the "Sufferers"
+
+ IV Debts of Honour
+
+ V Love _versus_ Politics
+
+ VI The Conscience of a Statesman
+
+ VII A Blow for Borrowdean
+
+VIII A Page from the Past
+
+ IX The Faltering of Mannering
+
+ X The End of a Dream
+
+ XI Borrowdean shows his "Hand"
+
+ XII Sir Leslie Borrowdean incurs a Heavy Debt
+
+XIII The Woman and--the Other Woman
+
+
+BOOK III
+
+ I Matrimony and an Awkward Meeting
+
+ II The Snub for Borrowdean
+
+ III Clouds--and a Call to Arms
+
+ IV Disaster
+
+ V The Journalist Intervenes
+
+ VI Treachery and a Telegram
+
+ VII Mr. Mannering, M.P.
+
+VIII Playing the Game
+
+ IX The Tragedy of a Key
+
+ X Blanche finds a Way Out
+
+
+BOOK IV
+
+
+ I The Persistency of Borrowdean
+
+ II Hester Thinks it "A Great Pity"
+
+ III Summoned to Windsor
+
+ IV Checkmate to Borrowdean
+
+ V A Brazen Proceeding
+
+
+
+
+A LOST LEADER
+
+
+
+
+BOOK I
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+RECONSTRUCTION
+
+
+The two men stood upon the top of a bank bordering the rough road which
+led to the sea. They were listening to the lark, which had risen
+fluttering from their feet a moment or so ago, and was circling now above
+their heads. Mannering, with a quiet smile, pointed upwards.
+
+"There, my friend!" he exclaimed. "You can listen now to arguments more
+eloquent than any which I could ever frame. That little creature is
+singing the true, uncorrupted song of life. He sings of the sunshine, the
+buoyant air; the pure and simple joy of existence is beating in his
+little heart. The things which lie behind the hills will never sadden
+him. His kingdom is here, and he is content."
+
+Borrowdean's smile was a little cynical. He was essentially of that order
+of men who are dwellers in cities, and even the sting of the salt breeze
+blowing across the marshes--marshes riven everywhere with long arms of
+the sea--could bring no colour to his pale cheeks.
+
+"Your little bird--a lark, I think you called it," he remarked, "may be a
+very eloquent prophet for the whole kingdom of his species, but the song
+of life for a bird and that for a man are surely different things!"
+
+"Not so very different after all," Mannering answered, still watching the
+bird. "The longer one lives, the more clearly one recognizes the absolute
+universality of life."
+
+Borrowdean shrugged his shoulders, with a little gesture of impatience.
+He had left London at a moment when he could ill be spared, and had not
+travelled to this out-of-the-way corner of the kingdom to exchange
+purposeless platitudes with a man whose present attitude towards life at
+any rate he heartily despised. He seated himself upon a half-broken rail,
+and lit a cigarette.
+
+"Mannering," he said, "I did not come here to simper cheap philosophies
+with you like a couple of schoolgirls. I have a real live errand. I want
+to speak to you of great things."
+
+Mannering moved a little uneasily. He had a very shrewd idea as to the
+nature of that errand.
+
+"Of great things," he repeated slowly. "Are you in earnest, Borrowdean?"
+
+"Why not?"
+
+"Because," Mannering continued, "I have left the world of great things,
+as you and I used to regard them, very far behind. I am glad to see you
+here, of course, but I cannot think of any serious subject which it would
+be useful or profitable for us to discuss. You understand me, Borrowdean,
+I am sure!"
+
+Borrowdean closely eyed this man who once had been his friend.
+
+"The old sore still rankles, then, Mannering," he said. "Has time done
+nothing to heal it?"
+
+Mannering laughed easily.
+
+"How can you think me such a child?" he exclaimed. "If Rochester himself
+were to come to see me he would be as welcome as you are. In fact," he
+continued, more seriously, "if you could only realize, my friend, how
+peaceful and happy life here may be, amongst the quiet places, you would
+believe me at once when I assure you that I can feel nothing but
+gratitude towards those people and those circumstances which impelled me
+to seek it."
+
+"What should you think, then," Borrowdean asked, watching his friend
+through half-closed eyes, "of those who sought to drag you from it?"
+
+Mannering's laugh was as free and natural as the wind itself. He had
+bared his head, and had turned directly seawards.
+
+"Hatred, my dear Borrowdean," he declared, "if I thought that they had a
+single chance of success. As it is--indifference."
+
+Borrowdean's eyebrows were raised. He held his cigarette between his
+fingers, and looked at it for several moments.
+
+"Yet I am here," he said slowly, "for no other purpose."
+
+Mannering turned and faced his friend.
+
+"All I can say is that I am sorry to hear it," he declared. "I know the
+sort of man you are, Borrowdean, and I know very well that if you have
+come down here with something to say to me you will say it. Therefore go
+on. Let us have it over."
+
+Borrowdean stood up. His tone acquired a new earnestness. He became at
+once more of a man. The cynical curve of his lips had vanished.
+
+"We are on the eve of great opportunities, Mannering," he said. "Six
+months ago the result of the next General Election seemed assured. We
+appeared to be as far off any chance of office as a political party could
+be. To-day the whole thing is changed. We are on the eve of a general
+reconstruction. It is our one great chance of this generation. I come to
+you as a patriot. Rochester asks you to forget."
+
+Mannering held up his hand.
+
+"Stop one moment, Borrowdean," he said. "I want you to understand this
+once and for all. I have no grievance against Rochester. The old wound,
+if it ever amounted to that, is healed. If Rochester were here at this
+moment I would take his hand cheerfully. But--"
+
+"Ah! There is a but, then," Borrowdean interrupted.
+
+"There is a but," Mannering assented. "You may find it hard to
+understand, but here is the truth. I have lost all taste for public life.
+The whole thing is rotten, Borrowdean, rotten from beginning to end. I
+have had enough of it to last me all my days. Party policy must come
+before principle. A man's individuality, his whole character, is assailed
+and suborned on every side. There is but one life, one measure of days,
+that you or I know anything of. It doesn't last very long. The months and
+years have a knack of slipping away emptily enough unless we are always
+standing to attention. Therefore I think that it becomes our duty to
+consider very carefully, almost religiously, how best to use them. Come
+here for a moment, Borrowdean. I want to show you something."
+
+The two men stood side by side upon the grassy bank, Mannering
+broad-shouldered and vigorous, his clean, hard-cut features tanned with
+wind and sun, his eyes bright and vigorous with health; Leslie
+Borrowdean, once his greatest friend, a man of almost similar physique,
+but with the bent frame and listless pallor of a dweller in the crowded
+places of life. Without enthusiasm his tired eyes followed the sweep of
+Mannering's arm.
+
+"You see those yellow sandhills beyond the marshes there? Behind them is
+the sea. Do you catch that breath of wind? Take off your hat, man, and
+get it into your lungs. It comes from the North Sea, salt and fresh and
+sweet. I think that it is the purest thing on earth. You can walk here
+for miles and miles in the open, and the wind is like God's own music.
+Borrowdean, I am going to say things to you which one says but once or
+twice in his life. I came to this country a soured man, cynical, a
+pessimist, a materialist by training and environment. To-day I speak of a
+God with bowed head, for I believe that somewhere behind all these
+beautiful things their prototype must exist. Don't think I've turned
+ranter. I've never spoken like this to any one else before, and I don't
+suppose I ever shall again. Here is Nature, man, the greatest force on
+earth, the mother, the mistress, beneficent, wonderful! You are a
+creature of cities. Stay with me here for a day or two, and the joy of
+all these things will steal into your blood. You, too, will know what
+peace is."
+
+Borrowdean, as though unconsciously, straightened himself. If no colour
+came to his cheeks, the light of battle was at least in his eyes. This
+man was speaking heresies. The words sprang to his lips.
+
+"Peace!" he exclaimed, scornfully. "Peace is for the dead. The last
+reward perhaps of a breaking heart. The life effective, militant, is
+the only possible existence for men. Pull yourself together, Mannering,
+for Heaven's sake. Yours is the _faineant_ spirit of the decadent,
+masquerading in the garb of a sham primitivism. Were you born into the
+world, do you think, to loiter through life an idle worshipper at the
+altar of beauty? Who are you to dare to skulk in the quiet places, whilst
+the battle of life is fought by others?"
+
+Another lark had risen almost from their feet, and, circling its way
+upwards, was breaking into song. And below, the full spring tide was
+filling the pools and creeks with the softly flowing, glimmering
+sea-water. The fishing boats, high and dry an hour ago, were passing now
+seaward along the silvery way. All these things Mannering was watching
+with rapt eyes, even whilst he listened to his companion.
+
+"Dear friend," he said, "the world can get on very well without me, and
+I have no need of the world. The battle that you speak of--well, I have
+been in the fray, as you know. The memory of it is still a nightmare to
+me."
+
+Borrowdean had the appearance of a man who sought to put a restraint upon
+his words. He was silent for a moment, and then he spoke very
+deliberately.
+
+"Mannering," he said, "do not think me wholly unsympathetic. There is a
+side of me which sympathises deeply with every word which you have said.
+And there is another which forces me to remind you again, and again, that
+we men were never born to linger in the lotos lands of the world. You do
+not stand for yourself alone. You exist as a unit of humanity. Think of
+your responsibilities. You have found for yourself a beautiful corner of
+the world. That is all very well for you, but how about the rest? How
+about the millions who are chained to the cities that they may earn their
+living pittance, whose wives and children fill the churchyards, the
+echoes of whose weary, never-ceasing cry must reach you even here? They
+are the people, the sufferers, fellow-links with you in the chain of
+humanity. You may stand aloof as you will, but you can never cut yourself
+wholly away from the great family of your fellows. You may hide from your
+responsibilities, but the burden of them will lie heavy upon your
+conscience, the poison will penetrate sometimes into your most jealously
+guarded paradise. We are of the people's party, you and I, Mannering, and
+I tell you that the tocsin has sounded. We need you!"
+
+A shadow had fallen upon Mannering's face. Borrowdean was in earnest, and
+his appeal was scarcely one to be treated lightly. Nevertheless,
+Mannering showed no sign of faltering, though his tone was certainly
+graver.
+
+"Leslie," he said, "you speak like a prophet, but believe me, my mind is
+made up. I have taken root here. Such work as I can do from my study is,
+as it always has been, at your service. But I myself have finished with
+actual political life. Don't press me too hard. I must seem churlish and
+ungrateful, but if I listened to you for hours the result would be the
+same. I have finished with actual political life."
+
+Borrowdean shrugged his shoulders despairingly. Such a man was hard to
+deal with.
+
+"Mannering," he protested, "you must not, you really must not, send me
+away like this. You speak of your written work. Don't think that I
+underestimate it because I have not alluded to it before. I myself
+honestly believe that it was those wonderful articles of yours in the
+_Nineteenth Century_ which brought back to a reasonable frame of mind
+thousands who were half led away by the glamour of this new campaign. You
+kindled the torch, my friend, and you must bear it to victory. You bring
+me to my last resource. If you will not serve under Rochester, come
+back--and Rochester will serve under you when the time comes."
+
+Mannering shook his head slowly.
+
+"I wish I could convince you," he said, "once and for all, that my
+refusal springs from no such reasons as you seem to imagine. I would
+sooner sit here, with a volume of Pater or Meredith, and this west wind
+blowing in my face, than I would hear myself acclaimed Prime Minister of
+England. Let us abandon this discussion once and for all, Borrowdean. We
+have arrived at a cul-de-sac, and I have spoken my last word."
+
+Borrowdean threw his half-finished cigarette into the ever-widening creek
+below. It was characteristic of the man that his face showed no sign of
+disappointment. Only for several moments he kept silence.
+
+"Come," Mannering said at last. "Let us make our way back to the house.
+If you are resolved to get back to town to-night, we ought to be thinking
+about luncheon."
+
+"Thank you," Borrowdean said. "I must return."
+
+They started to walk inland, but they had taken only a few steps when
+they both, as though by a common impulse, stopped. An unfamiliar sound
+had broken in upon the deep silence of this quiet land. Borrowdean, who
+was a few paces ahead, pointed to the bend in the road below, and turned
+towards his companion with a little gesture of cynical amusement.
+
+"Behold," he exclaimed, "the invasion of modernity. Even your
+time-forgotten paradise, Mannering, has its civilizations, then. What an
+anachronism!"
+
+With a cloud of dust behind, and with the sun flashing upon its polished
+metal parts, a motor car swung into sight, and came rushing towards them.
+Borrowdean, always a keen observer of trifles, noticed the change in
+Mannering's face.
+
+"It is a neighbour of mine," he remarked. "She is on her way to the golf
+links."
+
+"Golf links!" Borrowdean exclaimed.
+
+Mannering nodded.
+
+"Behind the sandhills there," he remarked.
+
+There was a grinding of brakes. The car came to a standstill below. A
+woman, who sat alone in the back seat, raised her veil and looked
+upwards.
+
+"Am I late?" she asked. "Clara has gone on--they told me!"
+
+She had addressed Mannering, but her eyes seemed suddenly drawn to
+Borrowdean. As though dazzled by the sun, she dropped her veil.
+Borrowdean was standing as though turned to stone, perfectly rigid and
+motionless. His face was like a still, white mask.
+
+"I am so sorry," Mannering said, "but I have had a most unexpected visit
+from an old friend. May I introduce Sir Leslie Borrowdean--Mrs.
+Handsell!"
+
+The lady in the car bent her head, and Borrowdean performed an automatic
+salute. Mannering continued:
+
+"I am afraid that I must throw myself upon your mercy! Sir Leslie insists
+upon returning this afternoon, and I am taking him back for an early
+luncheon. You will find Clara and Lindsay at the golf club. May we have
+our foursome to-morrow?"
+
+"Certainly! I will not keep you for a moment. I must hurry now, or the
+tide will be over the road."
+
+She motioned the driver to proceed, but Borrowdean interposed.
+
+"Mannering," he said, "I am afraid that the poison of your lotos land is
+beginning to work already. May I stay until to-morrow and walk round with
+you whilst you play your foursome? I should enjoy it immensely."
+
+Mannering looked at his friend for a moment in amazement. Then he laughed
+heartily.
+
+"By all means!" he answered. "Our foursome stands, then, Mrs. Handsell.
+This way, Borrowdean!"
+
+The two men turned once more seaward, walking in single file along the
+top of the grassy bank. The woman in the car inclined her head, and
+motioned the driver to proceed.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+
+THE WOMAN WITH AN ALIAS
+
+
+Borrowdean seemed after all to take but little interest in the game. He
+walked generally, some distance away from the players, on the top of the
+low bank of sandhills which fringed the sea. He was one of those men whom
+solitude never wearies, a weaver of carefully thought-out schemes, no
+single detail of which was ever left to chance or impulse. Such moments
+as these were valuable to him. He bared his head to the breeze, stopped
+to listen to the larks, watched the sea-gulls float low over the lapping
+waters, without paying the slightest attention to any one of them. The
+instinctive cunning which never deserted him led him without any
+conscious effort to assume a pleasure in these things which, as a matter
+of fact, he found entirely meaningless. It led him, too, to choose a
+retired spot for those periods of intensely close observation to which he
+every now and then subjected his host and the woman who was now his
+partner in the game. What he saw entirely satisfied him. Yet the way was
+scarcely clear.
+
+They caught him up near one of the greens, and he stood with his hands
+behind him, and his eyeglass securely fixed, gravely watching them
+approach and put for the hole. To him the whole performance seemed
+absolutely idiotic, but he showed no sign of anything save a mild and
+genial interest. Clara, Mannering's niece, who was immensely impressed
+with him, lingered behind.
+
+"Don't you really care for any games at all, Sir Leslie?" she asked.
+
+He shook his head.
+
+"I know that you think me a barbarian," he remarked, smiling.
+
+"On the contrary," she declared, "that is probably what you think us. I
+suppose they are really a waste of time when one has other things to do!
+Only down here, you see, there is nothing else to do."
+
+He looked at her thoughtfully. He had never yet in his life spoken half a
+dozen words with man, woman or child without wondering whether they might
+not somehow or other contribute towards his scheme of life. Clara
+Mannering was pretty, and no doubt foolish. She lived alone with her
+uncle, and possibly had some influence over him. It was certainly worth
+while.
+
+"I do not know you nearly well enough, Miss Mannering," he said, smiling,
+"to tell you what I really think. But I can assure you that you don't
+seem a barbarian to me at all."
+
+She was suddenly grave. It was her turn to play a stroke. She examined
+the ball, carefully selected a club from her bag, and with a long, easy
+swing sent it flying towards the hole.
+
+"Wonderful!" he murmured.
+
+She looked up at him and laughed.
+
+"Tell me what you are thinking," she insisted.
+
+"That if I played golf," he answered, "I should like to be able to play
+like that."
+
+"But you must have played games sometimes," she insisted.
+
+"When I was at Eton--" he murmured.
+
+Mannering looked back, smiling.
+
+"He was in the Eton Eleven, Clara, and stroked his boat at college. Don't
+you believe all he tells you."
+
+"I shall not believe another word," she declared.
+
+"I hope you don't mean it," he protested, "or I must remain dumb."
+
+"You want to go off and tramp along the ridges by yourself," she
+declared. "Confess!"
+
+"On the contrary," he answered, "I should like to carry that bag for you
+and hand out the--er--implements."
+
+She unslung it at once from her shoulder.
+
+"You have rushed upon your fate," she said. "Now let me fasten it for
+you."
+
+"Is there any remuneration?" he inquired, anxiously.
+
+"You mercenary person! Stand still now, I am going to play. Well, what do
+you expect?"
+
+"I am not acquainted with the usual charges," he answered, "but to judge
+from the weight of the clubs--"
+
+"Give me them back, then," she cried.
+
+"Nothing," he declared, firmly, "would induce me to relinquish them.
+I will leave the matter of remuneration entirely in your hands. I am
+convinced that you have a generous disposition."
+
+"The usual charge," she remarked, "is tenpence, and twopence for lunch."
+
+"I will take it in kind!" he said.
+
+She laughed gaily.
+
+"Give me a mashie, please."
+
+He peered into the bag.
+
+"Which of these clubs now," he asked, "rejoices in that weird name?"
+
+She helped herself, and played her shot.
+
+"I couldn't think," she said, firmly, "of paying the full price to a
+caddie who doesn't know what a mashie is."
+
+"I will be thankful," he murmured, "for whatever you may give me--even if
+it should be that carnation you are wearing."
+
+She shook her head.
+
+"It is worth more than tenpence," she said.
+
+"Perhaps by extra diligence," he suggested, "I might deserve a little
+extra. By the bye, why does your partner, Mr. Lindsay, isn't it, walk by
+himself all the time?"
+
+"He probably thinks," she answered, demurely, "that I am too familiar
+with my caddie."
+
+"You will understand," he said, earnestly, "that if my behaviour is not
+strictly correct it is entirely owing to ignorance. I have no idea as to
+the exact position a caddie should take up."
+
+"What a pity you are going away so soon," she said. "I might have given
+you lessons."
+
+"Don't tempt me," he begged. "I can assure you that without me the
+constitution of this country would collapse within a week."
+
+She looked at him--properly awed.
+
+"What a wonderful person you are!"
+
+"I am glad," he said, meekly, "that you are beginning to appreciate me."
+
+"As a caddie," she remarked, "you are not, I must confess, wholly
+perfect. For instance, your attention should be entirely devoted to the
+person whose clubs you are carrying, instead of which you talk to me and
+watch Mrs. Handsell."
+
+He was almost taken aback. For a pretty girl she was really not so much
+of a fool as he had thought her.
+
+"I deny it _in toto_!" he declared.
+
+"Ah, but I know you," she answered. "You are a politician, and you would
+deny anything. Don't you think her very handsome?"
+
+Borrowdean gravely considered the matter, which was in itself a somewhat
+humorous thing. Slim and erect, with a long, graceful neck, and a
+carriage of the head which somehow suggested the environment of a court,
+Mrs. Handsell was distinctly, even from a distance, a pleasant person to
+look upon. He nodded approvingly.
+
+"Yes, she is good-looking," he admitted. "Is she a neighbour of yours?"
+
+"She has taken a house within a hundred yards of ours," Clara Mannering
+answered. "We all think that she is delightful."
+
+"Is she a widow?" Borrowdean asked.
+
+"I imagine so," she answered. "I have never heard her speak of her
+husband. She has beautiful dresses and things. I should think she must be
+very rich. Stand quite still, please. I must take great pains over this
+stroke."
+
+A wild shot from Clara's partner a few minutes later resulted in a
+scattering of the little party, searching for the ball. For the first
+time Borrowdean found himself near Mrs. Handsell.
+
+"I must have a few words with you before I go back," he said,
+nonchalantly.
+
+"Say that you would like to try my motor car," she answered. "What do you
+want here?"
+
+"I came to see Mannering."
+
+"Poor Mannering!"
+
+"It would be," he remarked, smoothly, "a mistake to quarrel."
+
+They separated, and immediately afterwards the ball was found. A little
+later on the round was finished. Clara attributed her success to the
+excellence of her caddie. Mrs. Handsell deplored a headache, which had
+put her off her putting. Lindsay, who was in a bad temper, declined an
+invitation to lunch, and rode off on his bicycle. The rest of the little
+party gathered round the motor car, and Borrowdean asked preposterous
+questions about the gears and the speeds.
+
+"If you are really interested," Mrs. Handsell said, languidly, "I will
+take you home. I have only room for one, unfortunately, with all these
+clubs and things."
+
+"I should be delighted," Borrowdean answered, "but perhaps Miss
+Mannering--"
+
+"Clara will look after me," Mannering interrupted, smiling. "Try to make
+an enthusiast of him, Mrs. Handsell. He needs a hobby badly."
+
+They started off. She leaned back in her seat and pulled her veil down.
+
+"Do not talk to me here," she said. "We shall have a quarter of an hour
+before they can arrive."
+
+Borrowdean assented silently. He was glad of the respite, for he wanted
+to think. A few minutes' swift rush through the air, and the car pulled
+up before a queer, old-fashioned dwelling house in the middle of the
+village. A smart maid-servant came hurrying out to assist her mistress.
+Borrowdean was ushered into a long, low drawing-room, with open windows
+leading out on to a trim lawn. Beyond was a walled garden bordering the
+churchyard.
+
+Mrs. Handsell came back almost immediately. Borrowdean, turning his head
+as she entered, found himself studying her with a new curiosity. Yes, she
+was a beautiful woman. She had lost nothing. Her complexion--a little
+tanned, perhaps--was as fresh and soft as a girl's, her smile as
+delightfully full of humour as ever. Not a speck of grey in her black
+hair, not a shadow of embarrassment. A wonderful woman!
+
+"The one thing which we have no time to do is to stand and look at one
+another," she declared. "However, since you have tried to stare me out of
+countenance, what do you find?"
+
+"I find you unchanged," he answered, gravely.
+
+"Naturally! I have found a panacea for all the woes of life. Now what do
+you want down here?"
+
+"Mannering!"
+
+"Of course. But you won't get him. He declares that he has finished with
+politics, and I never knew a man so thoroughly in earnest."
+
+Borrowdean smiled.
+
+"No man has ever finished with politics!"
+
+"A platitude," she declared. "As for Mannering, well, for the first few
+weeks I felt about him as I suppose you do now. I know him better now,
+and I have changed my mind. He is unique, absolutely unique! Do you think
+that I could have existed here for nearly two months without him?"
+
+"May I inquire," Borrowdean asked, blandly, "how much longer you intend
+to exist here with him?"
+
+She shrugged her shoulders.
+
+"All my days--perhaps! He and this place together are an anchorage. Look
+at me! Am I not a different woman? I know you too well, my dear Leslie,
+to attempt your conversion, but I can assure you that I am--very nearly
+in earnest!"
+
+"You interest me amazingly," he remarked, smiling. "May I ask, does
+Mannering know you as Mrs. Handsell only?"
+
+"Of course!"
+
+"This," he continued, "is not the Garden of Eden. I may be the first, but
+others will come who will surely recognize you."
+
+"I must risk it," she answered.
+
+Borrowdean swung his eyeglass backwards and forwards. All the time he was
+thinking intensely.
+
+"How long have you been here?" he asked.
+
+"Very nearly two months," she answered. "Imagine it!"
+
+"Quite long enough for your little idyll," he said. "Come, you know what
+the end of it must be. We need Mannering! Help us!"
+
+"Not I," she answered, coolly. "You must do without him for the present."
+
+"You are our natural ally," he protested. "We need your help now. You
+know very well that with a slip of the tongue I could change the whole
+situation."
+
+"Somehow," she said, "I do not think that you are likely to make that
+slip."
+
+"Why not?" he protested. "I begin to understand Mannering's firmness now.
+You are one of the ropes which hold him to this petty life--to this
+philandering amongst the flower-pots. You are one of the ropes I want to
+cut. Why not, indeed? I think that I could do it."
+
+"Do you want a bribe?"
+
+"I want Mannering."
+
+"So do I!"
+
+"He can belong to you none the less for belonging to us politically."
+
+"Possibly! But I prefer him here. As a recluse he is adorable. I do not
+want him to go through the mill."
+
+"You don't understand his importance to us," Borrowdean declared. "This
+is really no light affair. Rochester and Mellors both believe in him.
+There is no limit to what he might not ask."
+
+"He has told me a dozen times," she said, "that he never means to sit in
+Parliament again."
+
+"There is no reason why he should not change his mind," Borrowdean
+answered. "Between us, I think that we could induce him."
+
+"Perhaps," she answered. "Only I do not mean to try."
+
+"I wish I could make you understand," he said impatiently, "that I am in
+deadly earnest."
+
+"You threaten?"
+
+"Don't call it that."
+
+"Very well, then," she declared, "I will tell him the truth myself."
+
+"That," he answered, "is all that I should dare to ask. He would come to
+us to-morrow."
+
+"You used not to underrate me," she murmured, with a glance towards the
+mirror.
+
+"There is no other man like Mannering," he said. "He abhors any form of
+deceit. He would forgive a murderer, but never a liar."
+
+"My dear Leslie," she said, "as a friend--and a relative--"
+
+"Neither counts," he interrupted. "I am a politician."
+
+She sat quite still, looking away from him. The peaceful noises from the
+village street found their way into the room. A few cows were making
+their leisurely mid-day journey towards the pasturage, a baker's cart
+came rattling round the corner. The west wind was rustling in the elms,
+bending the shrubs upon the lawn almost to the ground. She watched them
+idly, already a little shrivelled and tarnished with their endless
+struggle for life.
+
+"I do not wish to be melodramatic," she said, slowly, "but you are
+forcing me into a corner. You know that I am rich. You know the people
+with whom I have influence. I want to purchase Lawrence Mannering's
+immunity from your schemes. Can you name no price which I could pay? You
+and I know one another fairly well. You are an egoist, pure and simple.
+Politics are nothing to you save a personal affair. You play the game of
+life in the first person singular. Let me pay his quittance."
+
+Borrowdean regarded her thoughtfully.
+
+"You are a strange woman," he said. "In a few months' time, when you are
+back in the thick of it all, you will be as anxious to have him there as
+we are. You will not be able to understand how you could ever have wished
+differently. This is rank sentiment, you know, which you have been
+talking. Mannering here is a wasted power. His life is an unnatural one."
+
+"He is happy," she objected.
+
+"How do you know? Will he be as happy, I wonder, when you have gone, when
+there is no longer a Mrs. Handsell? I think not! You are one of the first
+to whom I should have looked for help in this matter. You owe it to us.
+We have a right to demand it. For myself personally I have no life now
+outside the life political. I am tired of being in opposition. I want to
+hold office. One mounts the ladder very slowly. I see my way in a few
+months to going up two rungs at a time. We want Mannering. We must have
+him. Don't force me to make that slip of the tongue."
+
+The sound of a gong came through the open window. She rose to her feet.
+
+"We are keeping them waiting for luncheon," she remarked. "I will think
+over what you have said."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III
+
+WANTED--A POLITICIAN
+
+
+Sir Leslie carefully closed the iron gate behind him, and looked around.
+
+"But where," he asked, "are the roses?"
+
+Clara laughed outright.
+
+"You may be a great politician, Sir Leslie," she declared, "but you are
+no gardener. Roses don't bloom out of doors in May--not in these parts at
+any rate."
+
+"I understand," he assented, humbly. "This is where the roses will be."
+
+She nodded.
+
+"That wall, you see," she explained, "keeps off the north winds, and the
+chestnut grove the east. There is sun here all the day long. You should
+come to Blakely in two months' time, Sir Leslie. Everything is so
+different then."
+
+He sighed.
+
+"You forget, my dear child," he murmured, "that you are speaking to a
+slave."
+
+"A slave!" she repeated. "How absurd! You are a Cabinet Minister, are
+you not, Sir Leslie?"
+
+He shrugged his shoulders.
+
+"I was once," he answered, "until an ungrateful country grew weary of the
+monotony of perfect government and installed our opponents in our places.
+Just now we are in opposition."
+
+"In opposition," she repeated, a little vaguely.
+
+"Meaning," he explained, "that we get all the fun, no responsibility,
+and, alas, no pay."
+
+"How fascinating," she exclaimed. "Do sit down here, and tell me all
+about it. But I forgot. You are not used to sitting down out of doors.
+Perhaps you will catch cold."
+
+Sir Leslie smiled.
+
+"I am inclined to run the risk," he said gravely, "if you will share it.
+Seriously, though, these rustic seats are rather a delusion, aren't they,
+from the point of view of comfort?"
+
+"There shall be cushions," she declared, "for the next time you come."
+
+He sighed.
+
+"Ah, the next time! I dare not look forward to it. So you are interested
+in politics, Miss Mannering?"
+
+"Well, I believe I am," she answered, a little doubtfully. "To tell you
+the truth, Sir Leslie, I am shockingly ignorant. You must live in London
+to be a politician, mustn't you?"
+
+"It is necessary," he assented, "to spend some part of your time there,
+if you want to come into touch with the real thing."
+
+"Then I am very interested in politics," she declared. "Please go on."
+
+He shook his head.
+
+"I would rather you talked to me about the roses. You should ask your
+uncle to tell you all about politics. He knows far more than I do."
+
+"More than you! But you have been a Cabinet Minister!" she exclaimed.
+
+"So was your uncle once," he answered. "So he could be again whenever he
+chose."
+
+She looked at him incredulously.
+
+"You don't really mean that, Sir Leslie?"
+
+"Indeed I do!" he asserted. "There was never a man within my recollection
+or knowledge who in so short a time made for himself a position so
+brilliant as your uncle. There is no man to-day whose written word
+carries so much weight with the people."
+
+She sighed a little doubtfully.
+
+"Then if that is so," she said, "I cannot imagine why we live down here,
+hundreds of miles away from everywhere. Why did he give it up? Why is he
+not in Parliament now?"
+
+"It is to ask him that question, Miss Mannering," Borrowdean said, "that
+I am here. No wonder it seems surprising to you. It is surprising to all
+of us."
+
+She looked at him eagerly.
+
+"You mean, then, that you--that his party want him to go back?" she
+asked.
+
+"Assuredly!"
+
+"You have told him this?"
+
+"Of course! It was my mission!"
+
+"Sir Leslie, you must tell me what he said."
+
+Borrowdean sighed.
+
+"My dear young lady," he said, "it is rather a painful subject with me
+just now. Yet since you insist, I will tell you. Something has come over
+your uncle which I do not understand. His party--no, it is his country
+that needs him. He prefers to stay here, and watch his roses blossom."
+
+"It is wicked of him!" she declared, energetically.
+
+"It is inexplicable," he agreed. "Yet I have used every argument which
+can well be urged."
+
+"Oh, you must think of others," she begged. "If you knew how weary one
+gets of this place--a man, too, like my uncle! How can he be content? The
+monotony here is enough to drive even a dull person like myself mad. To
+choose such a life, actually to choose it, is insanity!"
+
+Borrowdean raised his head. He had heard the click of the garden gate.
+
+"They are coming," he said. "I wish you would talk to your uncle like
+this."
+
+"I only wish," she answered, passionately, "that I could make him feel as
+I do."
+
+They entered the garden, Mannering, bareheaded, following his guest.
+Borrowdean watched them closely as they approached. The woman's
+expression was purely negative. There was nothing to be learned from the
+languid smile with which she recognized their presence. Upon Mannering,
+however, the cloud seemed already to have fallen. His eyebrows were set
+in a frown. He had the appearance of a man in some manner perplexed. He
+carried two telegrams, which he handed over to Borrowdean.
+
+"A boy on a bicycle," he remarked, "is waiting for answers. Two telegrams
+at once is a thing wholly unheard of here, Borrowdean. You really ought
+not to have disturbed our postal service to such an extent."
+
+Borrowdean smiled as he tore them open.
+
+"I think," he said, "that I can guess their contents. Yes, I thought so.
+Can you send me to the station, Mannering?"
+
+"I can--if it is necessary," Mannering answered. "Must you really go?"
+
+Borrowdean nodded.
+
+"I must be in the House to-night," he said, a little wearily. "Rochester
+is going for them again."
+
+"You didn't take a pair?" Mannering asked.
+
+"It isn't altogether that," Borrowdean answered, "though Heaven knows we
+can't spare a single vote just now. Rochester wants me to speak. We are a
+used-up lot, and no mistake. We want new blood, Mannering!"
+
+"I trust that the next election," Mannering said, "may supply you with
+it. Will you walk round to the stables with me? I must order a cart for
+you."
+
+"I shall be glad to," Borrowdean answered.
+
+They walked side by side through the chestnut grove. Borrowdean laid his
+hand upon his friend's arm.
+
+"Mannering," he said, slowly, "am I to take it that you have spoken your
+last word? I am to write my mission down a failure?"
+
+"A failure without doubt, so far as regards its immediate object,"
+Mannering assented. "For the rest, it has been very pleasant to see you
+again, and I only wish that you could spare us a few more days."
+
+Borrowdean shook his head.
+
+"We are better apart just now, Mannering," he said, "for I tell you
+frankly that I do not understand your present attitude towards life--your
+entire absence of all sense of moral responsibility. Are you indeed
+willing to be written down in history as a philanderer in great things,
+to loiter in your flower gardens, whilst other men fight the battle of
+life for you and your fellows? Persist in your refusal to help us, if you
+will, Mannering, but before I go you shall at least hear the truth."
+
+Mannering smiled.
+
+"Be precise, my dear friend. I shall hear your view of the truth!"
+
+"I do not accept the correction," Borrowdean answered, quickly. "There
+are times when a man can make no mistake, and this is one of them. You
+shall hear the truth from me this afternoon, and when your days here have
+been spun out to their limit--your days of sybaritic idleness--you shall
+hear it again, only it will be too late. You are fighting against Nature,
+Mannering. You were born to rule, to be master over men. You have that
+nameless gift of genius--power--the gift of swaying the minds and hearts
+of your fellow men. Once you accepted your destiny. Your feet were firmly
+planted upon the great ladder. You could have climbed--where you would."
+
+A curious quietness seemed to have crept over Mannering. When he
+answered, his voice seemed to rise scarcely above a whisper.
+
+"My friend," he said, "it was not worth while!"
+
+Borrowdean was almost angry.
+
+"Not worth while," he repeated, contemptuously. "Is it worth while, then,
+to play golf, to linger in your flower gardens, to become a dilettante
+student, to dream away your days in the idleness of a purely enervating
+culture? What is it that I heard you yourself say once--that life apart
+from one's fellows must always lack robustness. You have the instincts of
+the creator, Mannering. You cannot stifle them. Some day the cry of the
+world to its own children will find its echo in your heart, and it may be
+too late. For sooner or later, my friend, the place of all men on earth
+is filled."
+
+For a moment that somewhat cynical restraint which seemed to divest of
+enthusiasm Borrowdean's most earnest words, and which militated somewhat
+against his reputation as a public speaker, seemed to have fallen from
+him. Mannering, recognizing it, answered him gravely enough, though with
+no less decision.
+
+"If you are right, Borrowdean," he said, "the suffering will be mine.
+Come, your time is short now. Perhaps you had better make your adieux to
+my niece and Mrs. Handsell."
+
+They all came out into the drive to see him start. A curious change had
+come over the bright spring day. A grey sea-fog had drifted inland, the
+sunlight was obscured, the larks were silent. Borrowdean shivered a
+little as he turned up his coat-collar.
+
+"So Nature has her little caprices, even--in paradise!" he remarked.
+
+"It will blow over in an hour," Mannering said. "A breath of wind, and
+the whole thing is gone."
+
+Borrowdean's farewells were of the briefest. He made no further allusion
+to the object of his visit. He departed as one who had been paying an
+afternoon call more or less agreeable. Clara waved her hand until he was
+out of sight, then she turned somewhat abruptly round and entered the
+house. Mannering and Mrs. Handsell remained for a few moments in the
+avenue, looking along the road. The sound of the horse's feet could still
+be heard, but the trap itself was long since invisible.
+
+"The passing of your friend," she remarked, quietly, "is almost
+allegorical. He has gone into the land of ghosts--or are we the ghosts,
+I wonder, who loiter here?"
+
+Mannering answered her without a touch of levity. He, too, was unusually
+serious.
+
+"We have the better part," he said. "Yet Borrowdean is one of those men
+who know very well how to play upon the heartstrings. A human being is
+like a musical instrument to him. He knows how to find out the harmonies
+or strike the discords."
+
+She turned away.
+
+"I am superstitious," she murmured, with a little shiver. "I suppose that
+it is this ghostly mist, and the silence which has come with it. Yet I
+wish that your friend had stayed away from Blakely!"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Upstairs from her window Clara also was gazing along the road where
+Borrowdean had disappeared. And Borrowdean himself was puzzling over a
+third telegram which Mannering had carelessly passed on to him with his
+own, and which, although it was clearly addressed to Mannering, he had,
+after a few minutes' hesitation, opened. It had been handed in at the
+Strand Post-office.
+
+ "I must see you this week.--Blanche."
+
+A few hours later, on his arrival in London, Borrowdean repeated this
+message to Mannering from the same post-office, and quietly tearing up
+the original went down to the House.
+
+"I cannot tell," he reported to his chief, "whether we have succeeded or
+not. In a fortnight or less we shall know."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV
+
+THE DUCHESS ASKS A QUESTION
+
+
+Clara stepped through the high French window, and with skirts a little
+raised crossed the lawn. Lindsay, who was following her, stopped to
+light a cigarette.
+
+"We're getting frightfully modern," she remarked, turning and waiting for
+him. "Mrs. Handsell and I ought to have come out here, and you and uncle
+ought to have stayed and yawned at one another over the dinner-table."
+
+"You have an excellent preceptress--in modernity," he remarked. "May I?"
+
+"If you mean smoke, of course you may," she answered. "But you may not
+say or think horrid things about my best friend. She's a dear, wonderful
+woman, and I'm sure uncle has not been like the same man since she came."
+
+"I'm glad you appreciate that," he answered. "Do you honestly think he's
+any the better for it?"
+
+"I think he's immensely improved," she answered. "He doesn't grub about
+by himself nearly so much, and he's had his hair cut. I'm sure he looks
+years younger."
+
+"Do you think that he seems quite as contented?"
+
+"Contented!" she repeated, scornfully. "That's just like you, Richard. He
+hasn't any right to be contented. No one has. It is the one absolutely
+fatal state."
+
+He stretched himself out upon, the seat, and frowned.
+
+"You're picking up some strange ideas, Clara," he remarked.
+
+"Well, if I am, that's better than being contented to all eternity with
+the old ones," she replied. "Mrs. Handsell is doing us all no end of
+good. She makes us think! We all ought to think, Richard."
+
+"What on earth for?"
+
+"You are really hopeless," she murmured. "So bucolic--"
+
+"Thanks," he interrupted. "I seem to recognize the inspiration. I hate
+that woman."
+
+"My dear Richard!" she exclaimed.
+
+"Well, I do!" he persisted. "When she first came she was all right. That
+fellow Borrowdean seems to have done all the mischief."
+
+"Poor Sir Leslie!" she exclaimed, demurely. "I thought him so
+delightful."
+
+"Obviously," he replied. "I didn't. I hate a fellow who doesn't do things
+himself, and has a way of looking on which makes you feel a perfect
+idiot. Neither Mr. Mannering nor Mrs. Handsell--nor you--have been the
+same since he was here."
+
+"I gather," she said, softly, "that you do not find us improved."
+
+"I do not," he answered, stolidly. "Mrs. Handsell has begun to talk to
+you now about London, of the theatres, the dressmakers, Hurlingham,
+Ranelagh, race meetings, society, and all that sort of rot. She talks of
+them very cleverly. She knows how to make the tinsel sparkle like real
+gold."
+
+She laughed softly.
+
+"You are positively eloquent, Richard," she declared. "Do go on!"
+
+"Then she goes for your uncle," he continued, without heeding her
+interruption. "She speaks of Parliament, of great causes, of ambition,
+until his eyes are on fire. She describes new pleasures to you, and you
+sit at her feet, a mute worshipper! I can't think why she ever came here.
+She's absolutely the wrong sort of woman for a quiet country place like
+this. I wish I'd never let her the place."
+
+"You are a very foolish person," she answered. "She came here simply
+because she was weary of cities and wanted to get as far away from them
+as possible. Only last night she said that she would be content never to
+breathe the air of a town again."
+
+Lindsay tossed his cigarette away impatiently.
+
+"Oh, I know exactly her way of saying that sort of thing!" he exclaimed.
+"A moment later she would be describing very cleverly, and a little
+regretfully, some wonderful sight or other only to be found in London."
+
+"Really," she declared, "I am getting afraid of you. You are more
+observant than I thought."
+
+"There is one gift, at least," he answered, "which we country folk are
+supposed to possess. We know truth when we see it. But I am saying more
+than I have any right to. I don't want to make you angry, Clara!"
+
+She shook her head.
+
+"You won't do that," she said. "But I don't think you quite understand.
+Let me tell you something. You know that I am an orphan, don't you? I do
+not remember my father at all, and I can only just remember my mother. I
+was brought up at a pleasant but very dreary boarding-school. I had very
+few friends, and no one came to see me except my uncle, who was always
+very kind, but always in a desperate hurry. I stayed there until I was
+seventeen. Then my uncle came and fetched me, and brought me straight
+here. Now that is exactly what my life has been. What do you think of
+it?"
+
+"Very dull indeed," he answered, frankly.
+
+She nodded.
+
+"I have never been in London at all," she continued. "I really only know
+what men and women are like from books, or the one or two types I have
+met around here. Now, do you think that that is enough to satisfy one? Of
+course it is very beautiful here, I know, and sometimes when the sun is
+shining and the birds singing and the sea comes up into the creeks,
+well, one almost feels content. But the sun doesn't always shine,
+Richard, and there are times when I am right down bored, and I feel as
+though I'd love to draw my allowance from uncle, pack my trunk, and go up
+to London, on my own!"
+
+He laughed. Somehow all that she had said had sounded so natural that
+some part of his uneasiness was already passing away.
+
+"Yours," he admitted, "is an extreme case. I really don't know why your
+uncle has never taken you up for a month or so in the season."
+
+"We have lived here for four years," she said, "and he has never once
+suggested it. He goes himself, of course, sometimes, but I am quite sure
+that he doesn't enjoy it. For days before he fidgets about and looks
+perfectly miserable, and when he comes back he always goes off for a long
+walk by himself. I am perfectly certain that for some reason or other
+he hates going. Yet he seems to have been everywhere, to know every one.
+To hear him talk with Mrs. Handsell is like a new Arabian Nights to me."
+
+He nodded.
+
+"Your uncle was a very distinguished man," he said. "I was only at
+college then, but I remember what a fuss there was in all the papers when
+he resigned his seat."
+
+"What did they say was the reason?" she asked, eagerly.
+
+"A slight disagreement with Lord Rochester, and ill-health."
+
+"Absurd!" she exclaimed. "Uncle is as strong as a horse."
+
+"Would you like him," he asked, "to go back into political life?"
+
+Her eyes sparkled.
+
+"Of course I should."
+
+"You may have your wish," he said, a little sadly. "I don't fancy he has
+been quite the same man since Sir Leslie Borrowdean was here, and Mrs.
+Handsell never leaves him alone for a moment."
+
+She laughed.
+
+"You talk as though they were conspirators!" she exclaimed.
+
+"That is precisely what I believe them to be," he answered, grimly.
+
+"Richard!"
+
+"Can't help it," he declared. "I will tell you something that I have no
+right to tell you. Mrs. Handsell is not your friend's real name."
+
+"Richard, how exciting!" she exclaimed. "Do tell me how you know."
+
+"Her solicitors told mine so when she took the farm."
+
+"Not her real name? But--I wonder they let it to her."
+
+"Oh, her references were all right," he answered. "My people saw to that.
+I do not mean to insinuate for a moment that she had any improper reasons
+for calling herself Mrs. Handsell, or anything else she liked. The
+explanations given were quite satisfactory. But she has become very
+friendly with you and with your uncle, and I think that she ought to have
+told you both about it."
+
+"Do you know her real name?"
+
+"No! It is not my affair. My solicitors knew, and they were satisfied.
+Perhaps I ought not to have told you this, but--"
+
+"Hush!" she said. "They are coming out. If you like you can take me down
+to the orchard wall, and we will watch the tide come in--"
+
+Mannering came out alone and looked around. The full moon was creeping
+into the sky. The breath of wind which shook the leaves of the tall elm
+trees that shut in his little demesne from the village, was soft, and,
+for the time of year, wonderfully mild. Below, through the orchard trees,
+were faint visions of the marshland, riven with creeks of silvery sea. He
+turned back towards the room, where red-shaded lamps still stood upon the
+white tablecloth, a curiously artificial daub of color after the
+splendour of the moonlit land.
+
+"The night is perfect," he exclaimed. "Do you need a wrap, or are you
+sufficiently acclimatized?"
+
+She came out to him, tall and slender in her black dinner gown, the
+figure of a girl, the pale, passionate face of a woman, to whom every
+moment of life had its own special and individual meaning. Her eyes were
+strangely bright. There was a tenseness about her manner, a restraint in
+her tone, which seemed to speak of some emotional crisis. She passed out
+into the quiet garden, in itself so exquisitely in accordance with this
+sleeping land, and even Mannering was at once conscious of some alien
+note in these old-world surroundings which had long ago soothed his
+ruffled nerves into the luxury of repose.
+
+"A wrap!" she murmured. "How absurd! Come and let us sit under the cedar
+tree. Those young people seem to have wandered off, and I want to talk to
+you."
+
+"I am content to listen," he answered. "It is a night for listeners,
+this!"
+
+"I want to talk," she continued, "and yet--the words seem difficult.
+These wonderful days! How quickly they seem to have passed."
+
+"There are others to follow," he answered, smiling. "That is one of the
+joys of life here. One can count on things!"
+
+"Others for you!" she murmured. "You have pitched your tent. I came here
+only as a wanderer."
+
+"But scarcely a month ago," he exclaimed, "you too--"
+
+"Don't!" she interrupted. "A month ago it seemed to me possible that
+I might live here always. I felt myself growing young again. I believed
+that I had severed all the ties which bound me to the days which have
+gone before. I was wrong. It was the sort of folly which comes to one
+sometimes, the sort of folly for which one pays."
+
+His face was almost white in the moonlight. His deep-set grey eyes were
+fixed upon her.
+
+"You were content--a month ago," he said. "You have been in London for
+two days, and you have come back a changed woman. Why must you think of
+leaving this place? Why need you go at all?"
+
+"My friend," she said, softly, "I think that you know why. It is very
+beautiful here, and I have never been happier in all my life. But one may
+not linger all one's days in the pleasant places. One sleeps through the
+nights and is rested, but the days--ah, they are different."
+
+"I cannot reason with you," he said. "You are too vague. Yet--you say
+that you have been contented here."
+
+"I have been happy," she murmured.
+
+"Then you must speak more plainly," he insisted, a note of passion
+throbbing in his hoarse tones. "I ask you again--why do you talk of going
+back, like a city slave whose days of holiday are over? What is there in
+the world more beautiful than the gifts the gods shower on us here? We
+have the sun, and the sea, and the wind by day and by night--this! It is
+the flower garden of life. Stay and pluck the roses with me."
+
+"Ah, my friend," she murmured, "if that were possible!"
+
+She sank down into the seat under the cedar tree. Her hands were clasped
+nervously together, her head was downcast.
+
+"Your words," she continued, her voice sinking almost to a whisper, yet
+lacking nothing in distinctness, "are like wine. They mount to the head,
+they intoxicate, they tempt! And yet all the time one knows that it is
+not possible. Surely you yourself--in your heart--must know it!"
+
+"Not I!" he answered, fiercely. "The world would have claimed me if
+it could, but I laughed at it. Our destinies are our own. With our own
+fingers we mould and shape them."
+
+"There is the little voice," she said, "the little voice, which rings
+even through our dreams. Life--actual, militant life, I mean--may have
+its vulgarities, its weariness and its disappointments, but it is, after
+all, the only place for men and women. The battle may be sordid, and the
+prizes tinsel--yet it is only the cowards who linger without."
+
+"Then let you and me be cowards," he answered. "We shall at least be
+happy."
+
+She shook her head a little sadly.
+
+"I doubt it," she answered. "Happiness is a gift, not a prize. It comes
+seldom enough to those who seek it."
+
+He laughed scornfully.
+
+"I am not a seeker," he cried. "I possess. It seems to me that all the
+beautiful things of life are here to-night. Listen! Do you hear the sea,
+the full tide sweeping softly up into the land, a long drawn out
+undernote of breathless harmonies, the rustling of leaves there in the
+elm trees, the faint night wind, like the murmuring of angels? Lift your
+head! Was there anything ever sweeter than the perfume from that hedge of
+honeysuckle? What can a man want more than these things--and--"
+
+"Go on!"
+
+"And the woman he loves! There, I have said it. Useless words enough! You
+know very well that I love you. I meant to have said nothing just yet,
+but who could help it--on such a night as this! Don't talk of going away,
+Berenice. I want you here always."
+
+She held herself away from him. Her face was deathly white now. Her eyes
+questioned him fiercely.
+
+"Before I answer you. You were in London last week?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Why?"
+
+"I had business."
+
+"In Chelsea, in Merton Street?"
+
+He gave a little gasp.
+
+"What do you know about that?" he asked, almost roughly.
+
+"You were seen there, not for the first time. The person whom you
+visited--I have heard about. She is somewhat notorious, is she not?"
+
+He was very quiet, pale to the lips. A strange, hunted expression had
+crept into his eyes.
+
+"I want to know what took you there. Am I asking too much? Remember that
+you have asked me a good deal."
+
+"Has Borrowdean anything to do with this?" he demanded.
+
+"I have known Sir Leslie Borrowdean for many years," she answered, "and
+it is quite true that we have discussed certain matters--concerning you."
+
+"You have known Sir Leslie Borrowdean for many years," he repeated. "Yet
+you met here as strangers."
+
+"Sir Leslie divined my wishes," she answered. "He knew that it was my
+wish to spend several months away from everybody, and, if possible,
+unrecognized. Perhaps I had better make my confession at once. My name
+is not Mrs. Handsell. I am the Duchess of Lenchester."
+
+Mannering stood as though turned to stone. The woman watched him eagerly.
+She waited for him to speak--in vain. A sudden mist of tears blinded her.
+She closed her eyes. When she opened them Mannering was gone.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V
+
+THE HESITATION OF MR. MANNERING
+
+
+The peculiar atmosphere of the room, heavy with the newest perfume from
+the Burlington Arcade, and the scent of exotic flowers, at no time
+pleasing to him, seemed more than usually oppressive to Mannering as he
+fidgetted about waiting for the woman whom he had come to see. He was
+conscious of a restless longing to open wide the windows, take the
+flowers from their vases, throw them into the street, and poke out the
+fire. The little room, with all its associations, its almost pathetic
+attempts at refinement, its furniture which reeked of the Tottenham Court
+Road, was suddenly hateful to him. He detested his presence there, and
+its object. He was already in a state of nervous displeasure when the
+door opened.
+
+The girl who entered seemed in a sense as ill in accord with such
+surroundings as himself. She was plainly dressed in black, her hair
+brushed back, her complexion pale, her eyes brilliant with a not
+altogether natural light. She regarded him with a curious mixture of fear
+and welcome. The latter, however, triumphed easily. She came towards him
+with out-stretched hand and a delightful smile.
+
+"You;--so soon again!" she exclaimed. "Were there--so many mistakes?"
+
+Mannering's face softened. He was half ashamed of his irritation. He
+answered her kindly.
+
+"Scarcely any, Hester," he answered. "Your typing is always excellent."
+
+Her anxiety was only half allayed.
+
+"There is nothing else wrong?" she demanded, breathlessly.
+
+"Nothing whatever," he assured her. "Where is your mother?"
+
+She sat down. The light died out of her face.
+
+"Out!" she answered. "Gone to Brighton for the day. What do you want with
+her?"
+
+"Nothing," he answered, gravely. "I only wanted to know whether we were
+likely to be interrupted."
+
+"She will not be in for some time," the girl answered. "She is almost
+certain to stay down there and dine."
+
+He nodded.
+
+"Hester," he asked, "do you know any one--a man named Borrowdean? Sir
+Leslie Borrowdean?"
+
+She shook her head a little doubtfully.
+
+"I have heard mother speak of him," she said.
+
+"He is a friend of hers, then?"
+
+"She met him at a supper party at the Savoy a few weeks ago," she
+answered.
+
+"And since?"
+
+"I believe so! She talks about him a great deal. Why do you ask me this?"
+
+"I cannot tell you, Hester," he said, gravely. "By the bye, do you think
+that she is likely to have mentioned my name to him?"
+
+The girl flushed up to her eyebrows.
+
+"I--I don't know! I am sorry," she faltered. "You know what mother is. If
+any one asked her questions she would be more than likely to answer them.
+I do hope that she has not been making mischief."
+
+He left her anxiety unrelieved. For some few moments he did not speak
+at all. Already he fancied that he could see the whole pitiful little
+incident--Borrowdean, diplomatic, genial, persistent, the woman a fool,
+fashioned to his own making; himself the sacrifice. Yet the meaning of it
+all was dark to him.
+
+She moved over to his side. Her eyes and tone were full of appeal. She
+sat close to him, her long white fingers nervously interlocked.
+
+"I am afraid of you. More afraid than ever to-day," she murmured. "You
+look stern, and I don't understand why you have come."
+
+"To see you, Hester," he answered, with a sudden impulse of kindness.
+
+"Ah, no!" she interrupted, choking back a little sob. "We both know so
+well that it is not that. It is pity which brings you, pity and nothing
+else. You know very well what a difference it makes to me. If I have your
+work to do, and a letter sometimes, and see you now and then, I can bear
+everything. But it is not easy. It is never easy!"
+
+"Of course it is not," he assented. "Hester, have you thought over what I
+said to you last time I was here?"
+
+She shook her head.
+
+"What is the use of thinking?" she asked, quietly. "I could not leave
+her."
+
+"You mean that she would not let you go?" Mannering asked.
+
+"No! It is not that," the girl answered. "Sometimes I think that she
+would be glad. It is not that."
+
+He nodded gravely.
+
+"I understand. But--"
+
+"If you understand, please do not say any more."
+
+"But I must, Hester," he persisted. "There is no one else to give you
+advice. I know all that you can tell me, and I say that this is no
+fitting home for you. Your mother's friends are not fit friends for you.
+She has chosen her way in life, and she will not brook any interference.
+You can do no good by remaining with her. On the contrary, you are doing
+yourself a great deal of harm. I am old enough to be your father, child.
+Wise enough, I hope, to be your adviser. You shall be my secretary, and
+come and live at Blakely."
+
+A faint flush stole into her anaemic. One realized then that under
+different conditions she might have been pretty. Her face was no longer
+expressionless.
+
+"You are so kind," she said, softly. "I shall always like to think of
+this. And yet--it is impossible."
+
+"Why?"
+
+She hesitated.
+
+"It is difficult to explain," she said. "But my being here makes a
+difference. I found it out once when I went away for a week. Some of--of
+mother's friends came to the house then whom she will not have when I am
+here. If I were away altogether--oh, I can't explain, but I would not
+dare to go."
+
+Mannering seemed to have much to say--and said nothing. This queer,
+pale-faced girl, with her earnest eyes and few simple words, had silenced
+him. She was right--right at least from her own point of view. A certain
+sense of shame suddenly oppressed him. He was acutely conscious of his
+only half-admitted reason for this visit. He had argued for himself. It
+was his own passionate desire to free himself from associations that were
+little short of loathsome which had prompted this visit. And then what he
+had dreaded most of all happened. As they sat facing one another in the
+silent, half-darkened room, Mannering trying to bring himself into accord
+with half-admitted but repugnant convictions, she watching him
+hopelessly, the tinkle of a hansom bell sounded outside. The sudden
+stopping of a horse, the rattle of a latchkey, and she was in the room.
+Mannering rose to his feet with a little exclamation.
+
+The woman stood and looked in upon them. She wore a pink cloth gown, a
+flower-garlanded hat, a white coaching veil, beneath which her features
+were indistinguishable. She brought with her a waft of strong perfume.
+Her figure was a living suggestion of the struggle between maturity and
+the corsetiere. Before she spoke she laughed--not altogether pleasantly.
+
+"You here again!" she exclaimed to Mannering. "Upon my word! I'm not a
+ghost! Hester, go and see about some tea, and a brandy and soda. Billy
+Foa brought me up on his motor, and I'm half choked with dust."
+
+The girl rose obediently and quitted the room. The woman untwisted her
+veil, drew out the pins from her hat, and threw both upon the sofa. Then
+she turned suddenly upon Mannering.
+
+"Look here," she said, "the last twice you've been here you seem to have
+carefully chosen times when I am out. I don't understand it. It can't be
+that you want to see that chit of a girl of mine. Why don't you come when
+I ask you? Why do you act as though I were something to be avoided?"
+
+Mannering rose to his feet.
+
+"I came to-day without knowing where you were," he answered, "but I will
+admit that I wished to see Hester."
+
+"What for?"
+
+"I have asked her to come and live at Blakely with my niece and myself.
+She is an excellent typist, and I require a secretary."
+
+The woman looked at him angrily. Without her veil she displayed features
+not in themselves unattractive, but a complexion somewhat impaired by the
+use of cosmetics. The powder upon her cheeks was even then visible.
+
+"What about me?" she asked, sharply.
+
+Mannering looked her steadily in the face.
+
+"I do not think," he said, "that such a life would suit you."
+
+She was an angry woman, and she did not become angry gracefully.
+
+"You mean that I'm not good enough for you and your friends in the
+country. That's what you mean, isn't it? And I should like to know, if
+I'm not, whose fault it is. Tell me that, will you?"
+
+Mannering flinched, though almost imperceptibly.
+
+"I meant simply what I said," he said. "Blakely would not suit you at
+all. We have few friends there, and our simple life would not attract you
+in the slightest. With Hester it is different. She would have her work,
+in which she takes some interest, and I believe the change would be in
+every way good for her."
+
+"Well, she shan't come," the woman said, throwing herself into a chair,
+and regarding him insolently. "I'm not going to live all alone--and be
+talked about. Don't stare at me like that, Lawrence. I'm the child's
+mother, am I not?"
+
+"It is because you are her mother," he said, quietly, "that I thought you
+might be glad to find a suitable home for her."
+
+"What's good enough for me ought to be good enough for her," she
+answered, doggedly.
+
+Mannering was silent for a moment. This woman seemed to belong to a
+different world from that with whose denizens he was in any way familiar.
+Years of isolation, and a certain epicureanism of taste, from which
+necessity had never taken the fine edge, had made him a little
+intolerant. He could see nothing that was not absolutely repulsive in
+this woman, whose fine eyes were seeking even now to attract his
+admiration. She was making the best of herself. She had chosen the
+darkest corner of the room, and her pose was not ungraceful. Her skirts
+were skilfully raised to show just as much as possible of her long,
+slender foot, with the patent shoes and silver buckles. She knew that her
+ankles were above reproach, and her dress becoming. A dozen men had paid
+her compliments during the day, yet she knew that every admiring glance,
+every whispered word which had come to her to-day, or for many days past,
+would count for nothing if only she could pierce for a single moment the
+unchanging coldness of the man who sat watching her now with the face of
+a Sphynx. A slow tide of passion welled up in her heart. Was not he a man
+and free, and was not she a woman? It was not much she asked from him, no
+pledge, no bondage. His kindness only, she told herself, was all she
+craved. She wanted him to look at her as other men looked at her. Who was
+he that he should set himself on a pedestal? Perhaps he had grown shy
+from the rust of his country life, the slow drifting apart from the world
+of men and women. Perhaps--she rose swiftly to her feet and crossed the
+room.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI
+
+SACRIFICE
+
+
+She leaned over him, one hand on the back of his chair, the other seeking
+in vain for his.
+
+"Lawrence," she said, "you grow colder and more unkind every day. What
+have I done to change you so? I am a foolish woman, I know, but there are
+things which I cannot forget."
+
+He rose at once to his feet, and stood apart from her.
+
+"I thought," he said, "I believed that we understood one another."
+
+She laughed softly.
+
+"I am very sure that I do not understand you," she said. "And as for
+you--I do not believe that you have ever understood any woman. There was
+a time, Lawrence--"
+
+His impassivity was gone. He threw out his hands.
+
+"Remember," he said, "there is a promise between us. Don't break it.
+Don't dare to break it!"
+
+She looked at him curiously. A new idea concerning this man and his
+avoidance of her crept into her mind. It was at least consoling to her
+vanity, and it left her a chance. She had roused him too, at last, and
+that was worth something.
+
+"Why not?" she asked, moving a step towards him. "It was a foolish
+promise. It has done neither of us any good. It has spoilt a part of my
+life. Why should I keep silence, and let it go on to the end? Do you know
+what it has made of me, this promise?"
+
+He shrank back.
+
+"Don't! I have done all I could!"
+
+"All you could!" she repeated, scornfully. "You drew a diagram of your
+duty, and you have moved like a machine along the lines. You talk like a
+Pharisee, Lawrence! Come! You knew me years ago! Do you find me changed?
+Tell me the truth."
+
+"Yes," he admitted, "you are changed."
+
+She nodded.
+
+"You admit that. Perhaps, perhaps," she continued more slowly, "there are
+things about me now of which you don't approve. My friends are a little
+fast, I go out alone, I daresay people have said things. There, you see
+I am very frank. I mean to be! I mean you to know that whatever I am, the
+fault is yours."
+
+"You are as God or the Devil made you," he answered, hardly. "You are
+what you would have become, in any case."
+
+"Lawrence!"
+
+Already he hated the memory of his words. True or not, they were spoken
+to a woman who was cowering under them as under a lash. He was at a
+disadvantage now. If she had met him with anger they might have cried
+quits. But he had seen her wince, seen her sudden pallor, and it was not
+a pleasant sight.
+
+"Forgive me," he said. "I do not know quite what I am saying. You have
+broken a compact which I had hoped might have lasted all our days. Let us
+be better friends, if you will, but let us keep that promise which we
+made to one another."
+
+"It was so many years ago," she said, in a low tone. "I am afraid to
+think how many. It makes me lonely, Lawrence, to look ahead. I am afraid
+of growing old!"
+
+He looked at her steadily. Yes, the signs were there. She was a
+good-looking woman to-day, a handsome woman in some lights, but she had
+reached the limit. It was a matter of a few years at most, and then--He
+stood with his hands behind his back.
+
+"It is a fear which we must all share," he said, quietly. "The only
+antidote is work."
+
+"Work!" she repeated, scornfully. "That is the man's resource. What about
+us? What about me?"
+
+"It is no matter of sex," he declared. "We all make our own choice. We
+are what we make of ourselves."
+
+"It is not true," she answered, bluntly. "Not with us, at any rate. We
+are what our menkind make of us. Oh, what cowards you all are."
+
+"Cowards?"
+
+"Yes. You do what mischief you choose, and then soothe your conscience
+with platitudes. You will take hold of pleasure with both hands, but your
+shoulders are not broad enough for the pack of responsibility. Don't look
+at me as though I were a mile off, Lawrence, as though this were simply
+an impersonal discussion. I am speaking to you--of you. You avoid me
+whenever you can. I don't often get a chance of speaking to you. You
+shall listen now. You live the life of a poet and a scholar, they tell
+me. You live in a beautiful home, you take care that nothing ugly or
+disturbing shall come near you. You are pleased with it, aren't you? You
+think yourself better than other men. Well, you are making a big mistake.
+A man doesn't have to answer for his own life only. He has to carry the
+burden of the lives his influence has wrecked and spoilt. I know just
+what you think of me. I am a middle-aged woman, clinging to my youth and
+pleasures--the sort of pleasures for which you have a vast contempt.
+There isn't an hour of my days of which you wouldn't disapprove. I'm not
+your sort of woman at all. And yet I was all right once, Lawrence, and
+what I am now--" she paused, "what I am now--"
+
+Hester came in, followed by a maid with the tea-tray. She looked from
+one to the other a little anxiously. The atmosphere of the room seemed
+charged with electricity. Mannering's face was grey. Her mother was
+nervously crumpling into a ball her tiny lace handkerchief. Mrs.
+Phillimore rose abruptly from her seat.
+
+"Have you got the brandy and soda, Hester?" she asked.
+
+"I'm afraid I forgot it, mother," the girl answered. "Mayn't I make you
+some Russian tea? I've had the lemon sliced."
+
+The woman laughed, a little unnaturally.
+
+"What a dutiful daughter," she exclaimed. "That's right! I want looking
+after, don't I? I'll have the tea, Hester, but send it up to my room. I'm
+going to lie down. That wretched motoring has given me a headache, and
+I'm dining out to-night. Good-bye, Mr. Mannering, if I don't see you
+again."
+
+She nodded, without glancing in his direction, and left the room. The
+maid arranged the tea-tray and departed. Hester showed no signs of being
+aware that anything unusual had happened. She made a little desultory
+conversation. Mannering answered in monosyllables.
+
+When at last he put his cup down he rose to go.
+
+"You are quite sure, Hester," he said. "You have made up your mind?"
+
+She, too, rose, and came over to him.
+
+"You know that I am right," she answered, quietly. "The life you offer me
+would be paradise, but I dare not even think of it. I may not do any good
+here, perhaps I don't, but I can't come away."
+
+"You are a true daughter of your sex," he said, smiling. "The keynote of
+your life must be sacrifice."
+
+"Perhaps we are not so unwise, after all," she answered, "for I think
+that there are more happy women in the world than men."
+
+"There are more, I think, who deserve to be, dear," he answered, holding
+her hand for a moment. "Good-bye!"
+
+Mannering walked in somewhat abstracted fashion to the corner of the
+street, and signalled for a hansom. With his foot upon the step he
+hesitated.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII
+
+THE DUCHESS'S "AT HOME"
+
+
+"The perfect man," the Duchess murmured, as she stirred her tea, "does
+not exist. I know a dozen perfect women, dear, dull creatures, and plenty
+of men who know how to cover up the flaw. But there is something in the
+composition of the male sex which keeps them always a little below the
+highest pinnacle."
+
+"It is purely a matter of concealment," her friend declared. "Women are
+cleverer humbugs than men."
+
+Borrowdean shrugged his shoulders.
+
+"I know your perfect woman!" he remarked, softly. "You search for her
+through the best years of your life, and when you have found her you
+avoid her. That," he added, handing his empty cup to a footman, "is why
+I am a bachelor."
+
+The Duchess regarded him complacently.
+
+"My dear Sir Leslie," she said, "I am afraid you will have to find a
+better reason for your miserable state. The perfect woman would certainly
+have nothing to do with you if you found her."
+
+"On the contrary," he declared, confidently, "I am convinced that she
+would find me attractive."
+
+The Duchess shook her head.
+
+"Your theory," she declared, "is antiquated. Like and unlike do not
+attract. We seek in others the qualities which we strive most zealously
+to develop in ourselves. I know a case in point."
+
+"Good!" Sir Leslie remarked. "I like examples. The logic of them appeals
+to me."
+
+The Duchess half closed her eyes. For a moment she was silent. She seemed
+to be listening to something a long way off. Through the open windows of
+her softly shaded drawing-rooms, odourous with flowers, came the rippling
+of water falling from a fountain in the conservatory, the lazy hum of a
+mowing machine on the lawn, the distant tinkling of a hansom bell in the
+Square. But these were not the sounds which for a moment had changed her
+face.
+
+"I myself," she murmured, "am an example!"
+
+A woman who had risen to go sat down again.
+
+"Do go on, Duchess!" she exclaimed. "Anything in the nature of a personal
+confession is so fascinating, and you know you are such an enigma to all
+of us."
+
+"Am I?" she answered, smiling. "Then I am likely to remain so."
+
+"A perfectly obvious person like myself," the woman remarked, "is always
+fascinated by the unusual. But if you are really not going to give
+yourself away, Duchess, I am afraid I must move on. One hates to leave
+your beautifully cool rooms. Shall I see you to-night, I wonder, at
+Esholt House?"
+
+"Perhaps!"
+
+There were still many people in the room. Some fresh arrivals occupied
+his hostess's attention, and Borrowdean, with a resigned shrug of the
+shoulders, prepared to depart. He had come, hoping for an opportunity to
+be alone for a few minutes with the Duchess, and himself a skilful
+tactician in such small matters, he could not but admire the way she had
+kept him at arm's length. And then the opportunity for a master stroke
+came. A servant sought him out with a card. A man of method, he seldom
+left his rooms without instructions as to where he was to be found.
+
+"The gentleman begged you to excuse his coming here, sir," the man
+whispered, confidentially, "but he is returning to the country this
+evening, and was anxious to see you. He is quite ready to wait your
+convenience."
+
+Borrowdean held the card in his hand, scrutinizing it with impassive
+face. Was this a piece of unparalleled good fortune, or simply a trick of
+the fates to tempt him on to catastrophe? With that wonderful swiftness
+of thought which was part of his mental equipment he balanced the
+chances--and took his risk.
+
+"I should be glad," he said, looking the servant in the face, "if you
+would show the gentleman up here as an ordinary visitor. I should like to
+find you down stairs when I come out. You understand?"
+
+"Perfectly, sir," the man answered, and withdrew.
+
+Mannering had no idea whose house he was in. The address Borrowdean's
+servant had given him had been simply 81, Grosvenor Square. Nevertheless,
+he was conscious of a little annoyance as he followed the servant up the
+broad stairs. He would much have preferred waiting until Borrowdean had
+concluded his call. He remembered his grey travelling clothes, and all
+his natural distaste for social amenities returned with unabated force as
+he neared the reception-rooms and heard the softly modulated rise and
+fall of feminine voices, the swishing of silks and muslin, the faint
+perfume of flowers and scents which seemed to fill the air. At the last
+moment he would have withdrawn, but his guide seemed deaf. His words
+passed unheeded. His name, very softly but very distinctly, had been
+announced. He had no option but to pass into the room and play the cards
+which fate and his friend had dealt him.
+
+Borrowdean rose to greet his friend. Mannering, not knowing who his
+hostess might be, and feeling absolutely no curiosity concerning her,
+confined his attention wholly to the man whom he had come to seek.
+
+"I did not wish to disturb you here, Borrowdean," he said, quickly, "but
+if your call is over, could you come away for a few minutes? I have a
+matter to discuss with you."
+
+Borrowdean smiled slightly, and laid his hand upon the other's shoulder.
+
+"By all means, Mannering," he answered. "But since you have discovered
+our little secret, don't you think that you had better speak to our
+hostess?"
+
+Mannering was puzzled, but his eyes followed Borrowdean's slight gesture.
+Berenice, who at the sound of his voice had suddenly abandoned her
+conversation and risen to her feet, was within a few feet of him. A
+sudden light swept into Mannering's face.
+
+"You!" he exclaimed softly.
+
+Her hands went out towards him. Borrowdean, with an almost imperceptible
+movement, checked his advance.
+
+"So you see we are found out, after all, Duchess," he said, turning to
+her. "You have known Mrs. Handsell, Mannering, let me present you now to
+her other self. Duchess, you see that our recluse has come to his senses
+at last. I must really introduce you formally: Mr. Mannering--the Duchess
+of Lenchester."
+
+Berenice, arrested in her forward movement, watched Mannering's face
+eagerly. So carefully modulated had been Borrowdean's voice that no word
+of his had reached beyond their own immediate circle. It was as though a
+silent tableau were being played out between the three, and Mannering, to
+whom repression had become a habit, gave little indication of anything he
+might have felt. Borrowdean's fixed smile betokened nothing but an
+ordinary interest in the introduction of two friends, and the Duchess's
+back was turned towards her friends. They both waited for Mannering to
+speak.
+
+"This," he said, slowly, "is a surprise! I had no idea when I called to
+see Borrowdean here, of the pleasure which was in store for me."
+
+Borrowdean dropped his eyeglass.
+
+"Are you serious, my dear Mannering?" he exclaimed. "Do you mean to say
+that you came here--"
+
+"Only to see you," Mannering interrupted. "That you should know perfectly
+well. I am sorry to hurry you out, but the few minutes' conversation
+which I desired with you is of some importance, and my train leaves in
+an hour. I hope that you will pardon me," he added, looking steadily at
+Berenice, "if I hurry away one of your guests."
+
+She laughed quite in her natural manner.
+
+"I will forgive anything," she said, "except that you should hurry away
+yourself so unceremoniously. Come and sit down near me. I want to talk to
+you about Blakeley."
+
+She swept her gown on one side, disclosing a vacant place on the settee
+where she had been sitting. For a second her eyes said more to him than
+her courteous but half-careless words of invitation. Mannering made no
+movement forward.
+
+"I am sorry," he said, "but it is impossible for me to stay!"
+
+She seemed to dismiss him and the whole subject with a careless little
+shrug of the shoulders, which was all the farewell she vouchsafed to
+either of them. A woman who had just entered seemed to absorb her whole
+attention. The two men passed out.
+
+Mannering spoke no word until they stood upon the pavement. Then he
+turned almost savagely upon his companion.
+
+"This is a trick of yours, I suppose!" he exclaimed. "Damn you and your
+meddling, Borrowdean. Why can't you leave me and my affairs alone? No,
+I am not going your way. Let us separate here!"
+
+Borrowdean shook his head.
+
+"You are unreasonable, Mannering," he said. "I have done only what I
+believe you were on your way to ask me to do. I have brought you and
+Berenice together again. It was for both your sakes. If there has been
+any misunderstanding between you, it would be better cleared up."
+
+Mannering gripped his arm.
+
+"Let us go to your rooms, Borrowdean," he said. "It is time we understood
+one another."
+
+"Willingly!" Borrowdean said. "But your train?"
+
+"Let my train go," Mannering answered. "There are some things I have to
+say to you."
+
+Borrowdean called a hansom. The two men drove off together.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII
+
+THE MANNERING MYSTERY
+
+
+Borrowdean was curter than usual, even abrupt. The calm geniality of his
+manner had departed. He spoke in short, terse sentences, and he had the
+air of a man struggling to subdue a fit of perfectly reasonable and
+justifiable anger. It was a carefully cultivated pose. He even refrained
+from his customary cigarette.
+
+"Look here, Mannering," he said, "there are times when a few plain words
+are worth an hour's conversation. Will you have them from me?"
+
+"Yes!"
+
+"This thing was started six months ago, soon after those two
+bye-elections in Yorkshire. Even the most despondent of us then saw that
+the Government could scarcely last its time. We had a meeting and we
+attempted to form on paper a trial cabinet. You know our weakness. We
+have to try to form a National party out of a number of men who, although
+they call themselves broadly Liberals, are as far apart as the very poles
+of thought. It was as much as they could do to sit in the same room
+together. From the opening of the meeting until its close, there was but
+one subject upon which every one was unanimous. That was the absolute
+necessity of getting you to come back to our aid."
+
+"You flatter me," Mannering said, with fine irony.
+
+"You yourself," Borrowdean continued, without heeding the interruption,
+"encouraged us. From the first pronouncement of this wonderful new policy
+you sprang into the arena. We were none of us ready. You were! It is true
+that your weapon was the pen, but you reached a great public. The country
+to-day considers you the champion of Free Trade."
+
+"Pass on," Mannering interrupted, brusquely. "All this is wasted time!"
+
+"A smaller meeting," Borrowdean continued, "was held with a view of
+discussing the means whereby you could be persuaded to rejoin us. At that
+meeting the Duchess of Lenchester was present."
+
+Mannering, who had been pacing the room, stopped short. He grasped the
+back of a chair, and turning round faced Borrowdean.
+
+"Well?"
+
+"You know what place the Duchess has held in the councils of our party
+since the Duke's death," Borrowdean continued. "She has the political
+instinct. If she were a man she would be a leader. All the great ladies
+are on the other side, but the Duchess is more than equal to them all.
+She entertains magnificently, and with tact. She never makes a mistake.
+She is part and parcel of the Liberal Party. It was she who volunteered
+to make the first effort to bring you back."
+
+Mannering turned his head. Apparently he was looking out of the window.
+
+"Her methods," Borrowdean continued, "did not commend themselves to us,
+but beggars must not be choosers. Besides, the Duchess was in love with
+her own scheme. Such objections as we made were at once overruled."
+
+He paused, but Mannering said nothing. He was still looking out of the
+window, though his eyes saw nothing of the street below, or the great
+club buildings opposite. A scent of roses, lost now and then in the
+salter fragrance of the night breeze sweeping over the marshes, the magic
+of a wonderful, white-clad presence, the low words, the sense of a world
+apart, a world of speechless beauty.... What empty dreams! A palace built
+in a poet's fancy upon a quicksand.
+
+"The Duchess," Borrowdean continued, "undertook to discover from you what
+prospects there were, if any, of your return to political life. She took
+none of us into her confidence. We none of us knew what means she meant
+to employ. She disappeared. She communicated with none of us. We none of
+us had the least idea what had become of her. Time went on, and we began
+to get a little uneasy. We had a meeting and it was arranged that I
+should come down and see you. I came, I saw you, I saw the Duchess! The
+situation very soon became clear to me. Instead of the Duchess converting
+you, you had very nearly converted the Duchess."
+
+"I can assure you--" Mannering began.
+
+"Let me finish," Borrowdean pleaded. "I realized the situation at a
+glance. Your attitude I was not so much surprised at, but the attitude of
+the Duchess, I must confess, amazed me. I came to the conclusion that I
+had found my way into a forgotten corner of the world, where the lotos
+flowers still blossomed, and the sooner I was out of it the better. Now I
+think that brings us, Mannering, up to the present time."
+
+Mannering turned from the window, out of which he had been steadfastly
+gazing. There was a strained look under his eyes, and little trace of the
+tan upon his, cheeks. He had the air of a jaded and a weary man.
+
+"That is all, then," he remarked. "I can still catch my train."
+
+Borrowdean held out his hand.
+
+"No," he said. "It is not all. This explanation I have made for your
+sake, Mannering, and it has been a truthful and full one. Now it is my
+turn. I have a few words to say to you on my own account."
+
+Mannering paused. There was a note of something unusual in Borrowdean's
+voice, a portent of things behind. Mannering involuntarily straightened
+himself. Something was awakened in him which had lain dormant for many
+years--dormant since those old days of battle, of swift attack, of
+ambushed defence and the clamour of brilliant tongues. Some of the old
+light flashed in his eyes.
+
+"Say it then--quickly!"
+
+"We speak of great things," Borrowdean continued, "and the catching of a
+train is a trifle. My wardrobe and house are at your service. Don't hurry
+me!"
+
+Mannering smiled.
+
+"Go on!" he said.
+
+"The men who count in this world," Borrowdean declared, calmly lighting
+a cigarette, "are either thinkers of great thoughts or doers of great
+deeds. To the former belong the poets and the sentimentalists; to the
+latter the statesmen and the soldiers."
+
+"What have I done," Mannering murmured, "that I should be sent back to
+kindergarten? Platitudes such as this bore me. Let me catch my train."
+
+"In a moment. To all my arguments and appeals, to all my entreaties to
+you to realize yourself, to do your duty to us, to history and to
+posterity, you have replied in one manner only. You have spoken from the
+mushroom pedestal of the sentimentalist. Not a single word that has
+fallen from your lips has rung true. You have spoken as though your eyes
+were blind all the time to the letters of fire which truth has spelled
+out before you. Any further argument with you is useless, because you are
+not honest. You conceal your true position, and you adopt a false
+defence. Therefore, I relinquish my task. You can go and grow your roses,
+and think your poetry, and call it life if you will. But before you go I
+should like you to know that I, at least, am not deceived. I do not
+believe in you, Mannering. I ask you a question, and I challenge you to
+answer it. What is your true reason for making a scrap-heap of your
+career?"
+
+"Are you my friend," Mannering asked, quietly, "that you wish to pry
+behind the curtain of my life? If I have other reasons they concern
+myself alone."
+
+Borrowdean shook his head. He had scored, but he took care to show no
+sign of triumph.
+
+"The issue is too great," he said, "to be tried by the ordinary rules
+which govern social life. Will you presume that I am your friend, and let
+us consider the whole matter afresh together?"
+
+"I will not," Mannering answered. "But I will do this. I will answer your
+question. There is another reason which makes my reappearance in public
+life impossible. Not even your subtlety, Borrowdean, could remove it. I
+do not even wish it removed. I mean to live my own life, and not to be
+pitchforked back into politics to suit the convenience of a few
+adventurous office-seekers, and the Duchess of Lenchester!"
+
+"Mannering!"
+
+But Mannering had gone.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Borrowdean felt that this was a trying day. After a battle with Mannering
+he was face to face with an angry woman, to whose presence an imperious
+little note had just summoned him. Berenice was dressed for a royal
+dinner party, and she had only a few minutes to spare. Nevertheless she
+contrived to make them very unpleasant ones for Borrowdean.
+
+"The affair was entirely an accident," he pleaded.
+
+"It was nothing of the sort," she answered, bluntly. "I know you too well
+for that. Your bringing him here without warning was an unwarrantable
+interference with my affairs."
+
+Borrowdean could hold his own with men, but Berenice in her own room,
+a wonderful little paradise of soft colourings and luxury so perfectly
+chosen that it was rather felt than seen; Berenice, in her marvellous
+gown, with the necklace upon her bosom and the tiara flashing in her dark
+hair, was an overwhelming opponent. Borrowdean was helpless. He could not
+understand the attack itself. He failed altogether to appreciate its
+tenour.
+
+"Forgive me," he protested, "but I did not know that you had any plans.
+All that you told us on your return from Blakely was that you had failed.
+So far as you were concerned the matter seemed to me to be over, and with
+it, I imagined, your interest in Mannering. I brought him here--"
+
+"Well?"
+
+"Because I wished him to know who you were. I wished him to understand
+the improbability of your ever again returning to Blakely."
+
+"You are telling the truth now, at any rate," she remarked, curtly, "or
+what sounds like the truth. Why did you trouble in the matter at all?
+Where I have failed you are not likely to succeed."
+
+Borrowdean smiled for the first time.
+
+"I have still some hopes of doing so," he admitted.
+
+The Duchess glanced at the little Louis Seize time-piece, and hesitated.
+
+"You had better abandon them," she said. "Lawrence Mannering may be
+wrong, or he may be right, but he believes in his choice. He has no
+ambition. You have no motive left to work upon."
+
+Borrowdean shook his head.
+
+"You are wrong, Duchess," he remarked, simply. "I never believed in
+Mannering's sentimentality. To-day, with his own lips, he has confessed
+to me that another, an unbroached reason, stands behind his refusal!"
+
+"And he never told me," the Duchess murmured, involuntarily.
+
+"Duchess," Borrowdean answered, with a faint, cynical parting of the
+lips, "there are matters which a man does not mention to the woman in
+whose high opinion he aims at holding an exalted place."
+
+There was a knock at the door. The Duchess's maid entered, carrying a
+long cloak of glimmering lace and satin.
+
+The Duchess nodded.
+
+"I come at once, Hortense," she said, in French. "Sir Leslie," she added,
+turning towards him, "you are making a great mistake, and I advise you to
+be careful. You are one of those who think ill of all men. Such men as
+Lawrence Mannering belong to a race of human beings of whom you know
+nothing. I listened to you once, and I was a fool. You could as soon
+teach me to believe that you were a saint, as that Mannering had anything
+in his past or present life of which he was ashamed. Now, Hortense."
+
+Borrowdean walked off, still smiling. How simple half the world was.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX
+
+THE PUMPING OF MRS. PHILLIMORE
+
+
+Hester sprang to her feet eagerly as she heard the front door close, and
+standing behind the curtain she watched the man, who was already upon the
+pavement looking up and down the street for a hansom. His erect,
+distinguished figure was perfectly familiar to her. It was Sir Leslie
+Borrowdean again.
+
+She resumed her seat in front of the typewriter, and touched the keys
+idly. In a few moments what she had been expecting happened. Her mother
+entered the room.
+
+Of her advent there were the usual notifications. An immense rustling
+of silken skirts, and an overwhelming odour of the latest Bond Street
+perfume. She flung herself into a chair, and regarded her daughter with
+a complacent smile.
+
+"That delightful man has been to see me again," she exclaimed. "I could
+scarcely believe it when Mary brought me his card. By the bye, where is
+Mary? I want her to try to take that stain out of my pink silk skirt. I
+shall have to wear it to-night."
+
+"I will ring for her directly," the girl answered. "So that was Sir
+Leslie Borrowdean, mother! Why did he come to see you again so soon?"
+
+"I haven't the least idea," Mrs. Phillimore announced, "but I thought
+it was very sweet of him. It seems all the more remarkable when one
+considers the sort of man he is. He's very ambitious, you know, and
+devoted to politics."
+
+"Where did you meet him first?" Hester asked.
+
+"It was at the Metropole at Bexhill," Mrs. Phillimore answered. "We
+motored down there one day, and Lena Roberts told me that she heard him
+inquiring who I was directly we came into the room. He joined our party
+at luncheon. Billy knew him slightly, so I made him go over and ask him."
+
+Hester nodded, and seemed to be absorbed in some trifling defect of one
+of the keys of her typewriter.
+
+"Does he still ask you many questions about Mr. Mannering, mother?" she
+asked, quietly.
+
+"About Mr. Mannering!" Mrs. Phillimore repeated, with raised eyebrows.
+"Why, he scarcely ever mentions his name."
+
+She took up a small mirror from the table by her side, and critically
+touched her hair.
+
+"About Mr. Mannering, indeed," she repeated. "Why do you ask me such a
+question?"
+
+The girl hesitated.
+
+"Do you really want to know, mother?" she asked.
+
+"Of course!"
+
+"When Mr. Mannering was here last," Hester said, "he asked me whether Sir
+Leslie Borrowdean was a friend of yours. I fancy that they are political
+acquaintances, but I don't think that they are on very good terms."
+
+Mrs. Phillimore laid down the mirror and yawned.
+
+"Well, there's nothing very strange about that," she declared. "Lawrence
+isn't the sort to get on with many people, especially since he went and
+buried himself in the country. How pale you are looking, child. Why don't
+you go and take a walk, instead of hammering away at that old typewriter?
+Any one would think that you had to do it for a living!"
+
+"I prefer to earn my own living," the girl answered, "and I am not in the
+least tired. Tell me, are you going to see Sir Leslie Borrowdean again,
+mother?"
+
+The woman on the couch smoothed her hair once more, with a smile of
+gratification.
+
+"Sir Leslie has asked me to join a small party of friends for dinner at
+the Carlton this evening," she announced. "Why on earth are you looking
+at me like that, child? You're always grumbling that my friends are a
+fast lot, and don't suit you. You can't say anything against Sir Leslie."
+
+The girl had risen to her feet. The trouble in her face was manifest.
+
+"Mother," she said, slowly, "I wish that you were not going. I wish that
+you would have nothing whatever to do with Sir Leslie Borrowdean."
+
+"Good Heavens!--and why not?" the woman exclaimed, suddenly sitting up.
+
+"I believe that he only asked you because he has an idea that you can
+tell him--something he wants to know about Mr. Mannering," the girl
+answered, steadily. "I don't think that you ought to go!"
+
+"Rubbish!" her mother answered, crossly. "I don't believe that he has
+such an idea in his head. As though he couldn't ask me for the sake of my
+company. And if he does ask me questions, I'm not obliged to answer them,
+am I? Do you think that I'm to be turned inside out like a schoolgirl?"
+
+"Sir Leslie is very clever, and he is very unscrupulous," the girl
+answered. "I wish you weren't going! I believe that he wants to find out
+things."
+
+Mrs. Phillimore frowned uneasily.
+
+"I'm not a fool!" she said. "He's welcome to all he can get to know
+through me. I don't know what you want to try to make me uncomfortable
+for, Hester, I'm sure. Sir Leslie has never betrayed the least curiosity
+about Mr. Mannering, and I don't believe that he's any such idea in his
+head. Upon my word I don't see why you should think it impossible that
+Sir Leslie should come here just for the sake of improving an
+acquaintance which he found pleasant. That's what he gave me to
+understand, and he put it very nicely too!"
+
+"I do not think that Sir Leslie is that sort of man, mother."
+
+"And I don't see how you know anything about it," was the sharp response.
+"Ring the bell, please. I want to speak to Mary about my skirt."
+
+"You mean to dine with him then, mother?" she asked, crossing the room
+towards the bell.
+
+"Of course! I've accepted. To-night and as often as he chooses to ask me.
+Now don't upset me, please. I want to look my best to-night, and if I get
+angry my hair goes all out of curl."
+
+The girl went back to her typewriter. She unfolded a sheet of copy, and
+placed it on the stand before her.
+
+"If you have made up your mind, mother, I suppose you will go," she said.
+"Still--I wish you wouldn't."
+
+Mrs. Phillimore shrugged her shoulders.
+
+"If I did what you wished all the time," she remarked, pettishly, "I
+might as well drown myself at once. Can't you understand, Hester?" she
+added, with a sudden change of manner, "that I must do something to help
+me to forget? You don't want to see me go mad, do you?"
+
+The girl turned half round in her chair. She was fronting a mirror. She
+caught a momentary impression of herself--pallid, hollow-eyed, weary. She
+sighed.
+
+"There are other ways of forgetting," she murmured. "There is work."
+
+Her mother laughed scornfully.
+
+"You have chosen your way," she said, "let me choose mine. Turn round,
+Hester."
+
+The girl obeyed her languidly. Her mother eyed her with an attention she
+seldom vouchsafed to anything. Her plain black frock was ill-fitting and
+worn. She wore no ribbon or jewellery or adornment of any sort.
+Negatively her face was not ill-pleasing, but her figure was angular, and
+her complexion almost anaemic. The woman on the couch represented other
+things. She was tastefully, though somewhat elaborately dressed. She wore
+chains and trinkets about her neck, rings upon her fingers, and in her
+face had begun in earnest the tragic struggle between an actual forty and
+presumptive twenty. She laughed again, a little hardly.
+
+"And you are my daughter," she exclaimed. "You are one of the freaks of
+heredity. I'm perfectly certain you don't belong to me, and as for him--"
+
+"Stop!" the girl cried.
+
+The woman nodded.
+
+"Quite right," she said. "I didn't mean to mention him. I won't again.
+But we are different, aren't we? I wonder why you stay with me. I wonder
+you don't go and make a home for yourself somewhere. I know that you hate
+all the things I do, and care for, and all my friends. Why don't you go
+away? It would be more comfortable for both of us!"
+
+"I have no wish to go away," the girl said, softly, "and I don't think
+that we interfere with one another very much, do we? This is the first
+time I have ever made a remark about any--of your friends. To-night I
+cannot help it. Sir Leslie Borrowdean is Mr. Mannering's enemy. I am sure
+of it! That is why I do not like the idea of your going out with him. It
+doesn't seem to be right--and I am afraid."
+
+"Afraid! You little idiot!"
+
+"Sir Leslie Borrowdean is a very clever man," the girl said. "He is a
+very clever man, and he has been a lawyer. That sort of person knows how
+to ask questions--to--find out things."
+
+"Rubbish!" the woman remarked, sitting up on the couch. "Why do you try
+to make me so uncomfortable, Hester? Sir Leslie may be very clever, but
+I am not exactly a fool myself."
+
+She spoke confidently, but under the delicate coating of rouge her cheeks
+had whitened.
+
+"Besides," she continued, "Sir Leslie has never even mentioned Mr.
+Mannering's name in anything except the most casual way. You don't
+understand everything, Hester. Of course Lena and Billy Aswell and Rothe
+and all of them are all right, but they are just a little--well, you
+would call it fast, and it does one good to be seen with a different set
+sometimes. Sir Leslie Borrowdean and his friends are altogether
+different, of course."
+
+The girl bent over her work.
+
+"No doubt, mother," she answered, "There's Mary stamping on the floor.
+I expect she has your bath ready."
+
+An hour or so later Mrs. Phillimore departed in a hired brougham.
+Her hair had been carefully arranged by a local expert who had an
+establishment in the next street, her pink silk gown had come through the
+ordeal of cleansing with remarkable success, and the heels on her new
+evening shoes resembled more than anything else, miniature stilts. Her
+face was wreathed in smiles, and she possessed the good conscience and
+light heart of a woman who feels that she has made a successful toilette.
+All the vague misgivings of a short while ago had vanished. She gave her
+hair a final touch in the side window of the carriage as she drove off,
+and quite forgot to wave her hand to Hester, who was standing at the
+window to see her go. If any misgivings remained at all between the two,
+they were not with her. She settled herself back amongst the cushions
+with a little sigh of content. Sir Leslie was a most charming person, and
+evidently not at all insensible to her charms. She was sure that she was
+going to have a delightful evening.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Borrowdean, if he possessed no conscience, was not altogether free from
+some kindred eccentricity. He was reminded sharply enough of the fact
+about one o'clock the next morning, when the door of the little house on
+Merton Street was suddenly opened before he could touch the bell. Framed
+in a little slanting gleam of light, Hester, still wearing her plain
+black gown, stood and looked at him. His careless words of explanation
+died away upon his lips. The fire which flashed from her hollow eyes
+seemed to wither up the very sources of speech within him. The half
+lights were kind to her. He saw nothing of the hollow cheeks. The
+weariness of her pose and manner had passed like magic away. She stood
+there, erect as a dart, her head thrown back, a curious mixture of scorn,
+of loathing, and of fear in her expression. She looked at him steadily,
+and he felt his cheeks burn. He was ashamed--ashamed of himself, ashamed
+of his errand.
+
+"Your mother," he said, struggling to look away from her, "is--a little
+unwell. The heat of the room--"
+
+She swept down the steps and passed him. Before he could reach her side
+she was tugging at the handle of the carriage door.
+
+"Mother," she cried, through the window, "undo the door!"
+
+But Mrs. Phillimore made no answer. When at last the door was opened she
+was discovered half asleep in a corner. Her hair was in some disorder,
+and her cheeks no longer preserved that even colouring which is a result
+of the artistic use of the rouge-pot. Her head was thrown back, and she
+was apparently asleep. Hester stifled a sob. She took her mother by the
+arm, and shook her.
+
+Mrs. Phillimore sat up and smiled a sleepy smile. She made a few
+incoherent remarks. They helped her into the house and into an
+easy-chair, where she promptly turned her face towards the cushions and
+resumed her slumber. Sir Leslie moved towards the door, then hesitated.
+
+"Miss Phillimore," he said, "I cannot tell you how sorry I am that this
+should have happened."
+
+She was on her knees before her mother. She turned and rose slowly to
+her feet. Sir Leslie never quite forgot her gesture as she motioned him
+towards the door. It was one of the most uncomfortable moments of his
+life.
+
+"I am afraid--"
+
+She did not speak a word, yet Sir Leslie obeyed what seemed to him more
+eloquent than words. He turned and left the room and the house. Without
+any change in her tense expression she waited until she heard him go.
+Then she sank upon her knees on the hearthrug, and hid her face in her
+hands.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X
+
+THE MAN WITH A MOTIVE
+
+
+Mannering sat alone in the shade of his cedar tree. He had walked in his
+rose-garden amongst a wilderness of drooping blossoms, for the season of
+roses was gone. He had crossed the marshland seawards, only to find a
+little crowd of holiday-makers in possession of the golf links and the
+green tufted stretch of sandy shore. The day had been long, almost
+irksome. A fit of restlessness had driven him from his study. He seemed
+to have lost all power of concentration. For once his brain had failed
+him. The shadowy companions who stood ever between him and solitude
+remained uninvoked. His cigar had burnt out between his fingers. He threw
+it impatiently away. These were the days, the hours he dreaded.
+
+Clara came down the garden from the house, and seeing him, crossed the
+lawn and sat down beside him.
+
+"Why, my dear uncle," she exclaimed, "you look almost as dull as I feel!
+Let us be miserable together!"
+
+"With all my heart," he answered. "Whilst we are about it, can we invent
+a cause?"
+
+"Invent!" she repeated. "I do not think we need either of us look very
+far. Every one seems to have gone away whose presence made this place
+endurable. Uncle, do you know when Mrs. Handsell is coming back? She
+promised to write, and I have never heard a word!"
+
+Mannering turned his head. A little rustling wind had stolen in from
+seaward. Above their heads flights of sea-gulls were floating out towards
+the creeks. He watched them idly until they dropped down.
+
+"I do not think that she will come back at all," he said, quietly.
+"I heard to-day that the place was to let again."
+
+"And Sir Leslie Borrowdean?"
+
+"I think you may take it for granted," Mannering remarked, dryly, "that
+we shall see no more of him."
+
+The girl leaned back and sighed.
+
+"Uncle, what is it that makes you such a hermit?" she asked.
+
+"Age, perhaps, and experience," he answered, lightly. "There are not many
+people in the world, Clara, who are worth while!"
+
+"Mrs. Handsell was worth while," she murmured.
+
+Mannering did not reply.
+
+"And Sir Leslie Borrowdean," she continued, "was more than just worth
+while. I think that he was delightful."
+
+"Very young ladies, and very old ones," Mannering remarked, grimly,
+"generally like Borrowdean."
+
+"And what about Mrs. Handsell?" she asked, with a spice of malice in her
+tone.
+
+"Mrs. Handsell," Mannering answered, coolly, "was a very charming woman.
+Since both these people have passed out of our lives, Clara, I scarcely
+see why we need discuss them."
+
+"One must talk about something," she answered. "At least I must talk, and
+you must pretend to listen. I positively cannot exist in the house by
+myself any longer."
+
+"Where is Richard?" Mannering asked.
+
+"Gone into Norwich to dine at the barracks with some stupid men. Not that
+I mind his going," she added, hastily. "I wish he'd stay away for a
+month. Of course he's a very good sort, and all that, but he's deadly
+monotonous. Uncle, really, as a matter of curiosity, before I get to be
+an old woman I should like to see one other young man."
+
+"Plenty on the links just now!"
+
+"I know it. I sat out near the ninth hole all this morning. There are
+some Cambridge boys who looked quite nice. One of them was really
+delightful when I showed him where his ball was, but I can't consider
+that an introduction, can I? Heavens, who's this?"
+
+Behind the trim maid-servant already crossing the lawn, and within a few
+yards of them, came a strange, almost tragical, figure. Her plain black
+clothes and hat were powdered with dust, there were deep lines under her
+eyes, she swayed a little when she walked, as though with fatigue. She
+seemed to bring with her into the cool, quiet garden, with its country
+odours and general air of peace, an alien note. One almost heard the deep
+undercry from a far-away world of suffering--the great, ever-moving
+wheels seemed to have caught her up and thrown her down in this most
+incongruous of places. Clara, in her cool white dress, her fresh
+complexion, her general air of health and girlish vigour, seemed, as she
+rose to her feet, a creature of another sex, almost of another world. The
+two girls exchanged for a moment wondering glances. Then Mannering
+intervened.
+
+"Hester!" he exclaimed. "Why--is there anything wrong?"
+
+"Nothing--very serious," she answered. "But I had to see you. I thought
+that I had better come."
+
+He held out his hands.
+
+"You have had a tiring journey," he said. "You must come into the house
+and let them find you something to eat. Clara, this is Hester Phillimore,
+the daughter of an old friend of mine. Will you see about a room for her,
+and lend her anything she requires?"
+
+"Of course," Clara answered. "Won't you come into the house with me?" she
+added pleasantly to the girl. "You must be horribly tired travelling this
+hot weather, and this is such an out-of-the-way corner of the world!"
+
+Hester lingered for a moment, glancing nervously at Mannering.
+
+"I must go back to-night," she said. "I only came because I thought that
+it would be quicker than writing."
+
+"To-night?" he exclaimed. "But, my dear girl, that is impossible. There
+are no trains, and you are tired out already. Go into the house with my
+niece, and we will have a talk afterwards."
+
+He walked across the lawn with them, talking pleasantly to Hester,
+as though her visit were in no sense of the word unpleasant, or an
+extraordinary event. But when he returned to his seat under the cedar
+tree his whole expression was changed. The lines about his face had
+insensibly deepened. He leaned a little forward, looking with weary,
+unseeing eyes into the tangled shrubbery. Had all men, he wondered, this
+secret chapter in their lives--the one sore place so impossible to
+forget, the cupboard of shadows never wholly closed, shadows which at any
+moment might steal out and encompass his darkening life? He sat there
+motionless, and his thoughts travelled backwards. There were many things
+in his life which he had forgotten, but never this. Every word that had
+been spoken, every detail in that tragic little scene seemed to glide
+into his memory with a distinctness and amplitude which time had never
+for one second dimmed. So it must be until the end. He forgot the girl
+and her errand. He forgot the carefully cultivated philosophy which for
+so many years had helped him towards forgetfulness. So he sat until the
+sound of their voices upon the lawn recalled him to the present.
+
+"I will leave you to have your talk with uncle," Clara said. "Afterwards
+I will come back to you. There he is, sitting under the cedar tree."
+
+The girl came swiftly over to his side. For a moment the compassion which
+he had always felt for her swept away the memory of his own sorrow. Her
+pallid, colourless face had lost everything except expression. If the
+weariness, which seemed to have found a home in her eyes, was just now
+absent, it was because a worse thing was shining out of them--a fear,
+of which there were traces even in her hurried walk and tone. He rose at
+once and held out his hands.
+
+"Come and sit down, Hester," he said, "and don't look so frightened."
+
+She obeyed him at once.
+
+"I am frightened," she said, "because I feel that I ought not to have
+come here, and yet I thought that you ought to know at once what has
+happened. Sir Leslie Borrowdean has been coming to see mother. Last night
+he took her out to dinner. She came home--late--she was not quite
+herself. This morning she was frightened and hysterical. She said--that
+she had been talking."
+
+"To Sir Leslie Borrowdean?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+Mannering showed no signs of dismay. He took the girl's thin white hand
+in his, and held it almost affectionately.
+
+"I am very glad to know this at once, dear," he said, "and you did what
+was right and kind when you came to see me. But Sir Leslie Borrowdean has
+no reason to make himself my enemy. On the contrary, just now he seems
+particularly anxious to cultivate my friendship."
+
+"Then why," the girl asked, "has he gone out of his way to--to--"
+
+Mannering stopped her.
+
+"He had a motive, of course. Borrowdean is one of those men who do
+nothing without a motive. I believe that I can even guess what it is.
+Don't let this thing distress you too much, Hester. I do not think that
+we have anything to worry about."
+
+"But he knows!"
+
+"I could not imagine a man," Mannering answered, "better able to keep a
+secret."
+
+The girl sat silent for a moment.
+
+"I suppose I have been an idiot," she remarked.
+
+"You have been nothing of the sort," Mannering asserted, firmly. "You
+have done just what is kind, and what will help me to save the situation.
+I must confess that I should not like to have been taken by surprise. You
+have saved me from that. Now let us put the whole subject away for a
+time. How I wish that you could stay here for a few days."
+
+The girl smiled a little piteously.
+
+"I ought not to have left her even for so long as this," she said. "I
+must go back to-morrow morning by the first train."
+
+He nodded. He felt that it was useless to combat her resolution.
+
+"You and I," he said, gravely, "have both our burdens to carry. Only it
+seems a little unfair that Providence should have made my back so much
+the broader. Listen, Hester!"
+
+The full murmur of the sea growing louder and louder as the salt water
+flowed up into the creeks betokened the change of tide. Faint wreaths of
+mist were rising up from over the shadowy marshland. Above them were the
+stars. He laid his hand upon her shoulder.
+
+"Dear child!" he said, "I think that you understand how it is that the
+burden, after all, is easier for me. A man may forget his troubles here,
+for all the while there is this eternal background of peaceful things."
+
+Her hand stole into his.
+
+"Yes," she murmured, "I understand. Don't let them ever bring you away."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI
+
+MANNERING'S ALTERNATIVE
+
+
+Once again Mannering found himself in the over-scented, overheated room,
+which was perhaps of all places in the world the one he hated the most.
+Fresh from the wind-swept places of his country home, he found the
+atmosphere intolerable. After a few minutes' waiting he threw open the
+windows and leaned out. Hester was walking in the Square somewhere. He
+had a shrewd idea that she had been sent out of the way. With a restless
+impatience of her absence he awaited the interview which he dreaded.
+
+Her mother's coming took him a little by surprise. She seemed to have
+laid aside all her usual customs. She entered the room quietly. She
+greeted him almost nervously. She was dressed, without at any rate any
+obvious attempt to attract, in a plain black gown, and with none of the
+extravagances in which she sometimes delighted. Her usual boisterous
+confidence of manner seemed to have deserted her. Her face, without its
+skilful touches of rouge, looked thin, and almost peaked.
+
+"I am so glad that you came, Lawrence," she said. "It was very good of
+you."
+
+She glanced towards the opened windows, and he closed them at once.
+
+"I am afraid," he said, "that you have not been well!"
+
+There was a touch of her old self in the hardness of her low laugh.
+
+"It is remorse!" she declared. "I think that for once in my life I have
+permitted myself to think! It is a great mistake. One loses confidence
+when one realizes what a beast one is."
+
+He waited in silence. It seemed to him the best thing. She sat down a
+little wearily. He remained standing a few feet away.
+
+"I have given you away, Lawrence," she said, quietly.
+
+"So," he remarked, "I understand."
+
+"Hester has told you, of course. I am not blaming her. She did quite
+right. Only I should have told you myself. I wanted to be the first to
+assure you of this. Our secret is quite safe. The man--with whom I made
+a fool of myself--has given me his word of honour."
+
+"Sir Leslie Borrowdean's--word of honour!" Mannering remarked, with slow
+scorn. "Do you know the man, I wonder?"
+
+"I know that he wishes to be your friend, and not your enemy," she said.
+
+"He chooses his friends for what they are worth to him," Mannering
+answered. "It is all a matter of self-interest. He has some idea of
+making me the stepping-stone to his advancement. I have a place just now
+in his scheme of life. But as for friendship! Borrowdean does not know
+the meaning of the word."
+
+"You speak bitterly," she remarked.
+
+"I know the man," he answered.
+
+"Will you tell me," she asked, "what it is that he wants of you?"
+
+He shrugged his shoulders.
+
+"Is this worth discussing between us?" he asked.
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Very well, then, you shall know. He wants me to re-enter political life,
+to be the jackal to pull the chestnuts out of the fire for him."
+
+"To re-enter political life! And why don't you?"
+
+Mannering turned abruptly round and looked her in the face. He had been
+gazing out of the window, wondering how long it would be before Hester
+returned.
+
+"Why don't I!" he repeated, a little vaguely. "How can you ask me such a
+question as that?"
+
+She was undisturbed. Again he marvelled at the change in her.
+
+"Is it so very extraordinary a question?" she said. "I have often
+wondered whether you meant to content yourself with your present life
+always. It is scarcely worthy of you, is it? You were born to other
+things than to live the life of a country gentleman. You dabble in
+literature, they say, and poke your stick into politics through the pages
+of the reviews. Why don't you take your coat off and play the game?"
+
+Mannering was silent for several moments. He was, however, meditating his
+own reply less than studying his questioner. Her attitude was amazing to
+him. She watched him all the time, frowning.
+
+"You are not usually so tongue-tied," she remarked, irritably. "Have you
+nothing to say to me?"
+
+"I am wondering," he said, quietly, "what has given birth to this sudden
+interest in my proceedings. What does it matter to you how my days are
+spent, or what manner of use I make of them?"
+
+"There was a time--" she began.
+
+"A time irretrievably past," he interrupted, shortly.
+
+"I am not so sure!" she declared, doubtfully.
+
+"What has Borrowdean to do with this?" he asked her, abruptly.
+
+"Borrowdean?"
+
+"Surely! Some one has been putting notions into your head."
+
+"Why take that for granted?" she asked, equably. "The pity of the whole
+thing is obvious enough, isn't it? Sometimes I think that we were a pair
+of fools. We played into the hands of fate. We were brought face to face
+with a terrible situation. Instead of meeting it bravely we played the
+coward. Why don't you forget, Lawrence, as I have done? Take up your work
+again. Set a seal upon--that memory."
+
+"I have outgrown my ambitions," he answered. "Life was hot enough in my
+veins then. Desire grows cold with the years. I am content."
+
+"But I," she answered, "am not."
+
+"We each chose our life," he reminded her.
+
+"Perhaps. I am not satisfied with my choice. You may be with yours."
+
+"I am."
+
+She leaned over towards him.
+
+"Once," she said, "you offered me what you called--atonement. I refused
+it. Just then it seemed horrible. Now that feeling has passed away. I am
+lonely, Lawrence, and I am weary of the sort of life I have been living.
+Supposing I asked you to make me that offer again?"
+
+Mannering turned slowly towards her. He was not a man who easily showed
+emotion, but there were traces of it now in his face. The hand which
+rested on the back of his chair shook. There was in his eyes the look of
+a man who sees evil things.
+
+"It is too late, Blanche," he said. "You cannot be in earnest?"
+
+"Why not?" she murmured, dropping her eyes. "I am tired of my life. What
+you owed me then you owe me now. Why should it be too late? I am not an
+old woman yet, nor are you an old man, and I am weary of being alone."
+
+Mannering walked to the window. His hand went to his forehead. It was
+damp and cold. He was afraid! If she were in earnest! And she spoke like
+a woman who knew her mind. She was always, he remembered, a creature of
+caprice. If she were really in earnest!
+
+"We have drifted too far apart, Blanche," he said, making an effort to
+face the situation. "Years ago this might have been possible. To-day it
+would be a dismal failure. My ways are not yours. The life I lead would
+bore you to death."
+
+"There is no reason why you should not alter it," she answered, calmly.
+"In fact, I should wish you to. Blakely all the year round would be an
+impossibility. You could come and live in London."
+
+He looked at her fixedly.
+
+"Have you forgotten?" he asked.
+
+She covered her face with her hands for a moment. If indeed she really
+felt any emotion it passed quickly away, for when she looked up again
+there were no traces left.
+
+"I have forgotten nothing," she declared, defiantly. "Only the horror and
+fear of it all has passed away. I don't see why I should suffer all my
+life. In fact, I don't mean to. I don't want to be a miserable, lonely
+old woman. I want a home, something different from this."
+
+Mannering faced her gravely.
+
+"Blanche," he said, "you are proposing something which would most surely
+ruin the rest of our lives. What we might have been to one another if
+things had been different it is hard to say. But this much is very
+certain. We belong now to different worlds. We have drifted apart with
+the years. Even the little we see of one another now is far from a
+pleasure to either of us. What you are suggesting would be simply
+suicidal."
+
+She was silent. He watched her anxiously. As a rule her face was easy
+enough to read. To-day it was impenetrable. He could not tell what was
+passing behind that still, almost stony, look. Her silence forced him
+again into speech.
+
+"You agree with me, surely, Blanche? You must agree with me?"
+
+She raised her head.
+
+"I am not sure that I do," she answered. "But at least I understand you.
+That is something! You want to go on as you are--apart from me. That is
+true, isn't it?"
+
+"Yes!"
+
+She nodded.
+
+"At least you are candid. You want your liberty--unfettered. What are you
+willing to pay for it?"
+
+He looked at her incredulously.
+
+"I do not quite understand!" he said.
+
+She laughed, and the laugh belonged to her old self.
+
+"Indeed! I thought that I was explicit enough, brutally explicit, even.
+What have you to offer me in place of your name and yourself? What
+sacrifice are you prepared to make?"
+
+He looked at her furtively, as though even then he doubted the
+significance of her words.
+
+"You have already half my income," he said, slowly.
+
+She shrugged her shoulders.
+
+"A thousand a year! What can one do on that? To live decently in town one
+needs much more."
+
+"It is as much as I can offer," he remarked, stiffly.
+
+"Then you should earn money," she declared. "It's easy enough for men
+with brains. Go back into politics instead of idling your time away down
+in Blakely. I mean it! I've no patience with men who have a right to a
+place in the world which they won't fill."
+
+"Surely," he remonstrated, "I may be allowed to choose the manner of my
+life!"
+
+"If you can afford to--yes," she answered. "But I want one of two things.
+The first seems to scare you to death even to think of. The second is
+more money--a good deal more money."
+
+"But," he protested, "even if I did as you suggested, and went back into
+politics, it would be some time, if ever, before I should be any better
+off."
+
+"I will wait until that time comes," she answered, "provided that when it
+does, you share with me."
+
+Then Mannering understood.
+
+"Upon my word," he exclaimed, "you are an apt conspirator indeed. All
+this time you have been fooling me. I even fancied--bah! How much is
+Borrowdean giving you for this?"
+
+"Nothing at all," she answered, coolly. "It is my own sincere desire
+for your welfare which has prompted all that I have said to you. I am
+ambitious for you, Lawrence. I should like to see you Prime Minister.
+I am sure you could be if you tried. You are letting your talents rust,
+and I don't approve of it!"
+
+The faint note of mockery in her tone was clearly apparent. Mannering
+found it hard to answer her calmly.
+
+"Come," he said, "put it into plain words. What does it mean? What do you
+want?"
+
+"Sir Leslie tells me," she said, raising her eyes and looking him in the
+face, "that his party is prepared to find you a safe seat to-morrow. I
+want you to give up your hermit's life and accept it."
+
+"And the alternative?"
+
+"You have it already before you. Your reception of it was not, I must
+admit, altogether flattering."
+
+"I am allowed," he said, "some short space of time for consideration?"
+
+"Until to-morrow, if you wish," she answered. "I imagine you know pretty
+well what you mean to do."
+
+He picked up his hat and turned towards the door.
+
+"Yes," he said, "I suppose I do!"
+
+
+
+
+BOOK II
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+BORROWDEAN MAKES A BARGAIN
+
+
+Borrowdean sank into the chair which Berenice had indicated, with a
+little sigh of relief.
+
+"These all-night sittings," he remarked, "get less of a joke as one
+advances in years. You read the reports this morning?"
+
+She nodded.
+
+"And Mannering's speech?"
+
+"Every word of it."
+
+"Our little conspiracy," he continued, "is bearing fruit. Honestly,
+Mannering is a surprise, even to me. After these years of rust I scarcely
+expected him to step back at once into all his former brilliancy. His
+speech last night was wonderful."
+
+"I heard it," she said. "You are quite right. It was wonderful."
+
+"You were in the House?" he asked, looking up quickly.
+
+"I was there till midnight," she answered.
+
+Borrowdean was thoughtful for a moment.
+
+"His speech," he remarked, "sounded even better than it read."
+
+"I thought so," she admitted. "He has all the smaller tricks of the
+orator, as well as the gift of eloquence. One can always listen to him
+with pleasure."
+
+"Will you pardon me," Borrowdean asked, "if I make a remark which may
+sound a little impertinent? You and Mannering were great friends at
+Blakely. On my first visit there you will remember that you did not
+attempt to conceal that there was more than an ordinary intimacy between
+you. Yet to-day I notice that there are indications on both your parts of
+a desire to avoid one another as much as possible. It seems to me a pity
+that you two should not be friends. Is there any small misunderstanding
+which a common friend--such as I trust I may call myself--might help
+to smooth away?"
+
+Berenice regarded him thoughtfully.
+
+"It is strange," she said, "that you should talk to me like this, you who
+are certainly responsible for any estrangement there may be between Mr.
+Mannering and myself. Please answer me this question. Why do you wish us
+to be friends?"
+
+Borrowdean shrugged his shoulders.
+
+"You and he and myself, with about a dozen others," he answered, "form
+the backbone of a political party. As time goes on we shall in all
+probability be drawn closer and closer together. It seems to me best that
+our alliance should be as real a thing as possible."
+
+Berenice smiled.
+
+"Rather a sentimental attitude for you, Sir Leslie," she remarked. "Have
+you ever considered the fact that any coolness there may be between
+Lawrence Mannering and myself is entirely due to you?"
+
+"To me!" he exclaimed.
+
+"Exactly! At Blakely we were on terms of the most intimate friendship. I
+had grown to like and respect him more than any man I had ever met. I
+don't know exactly why I should take you so far into my confidence, but I
+am inclined to do so. Our friendship seemed likely to develop into--other
+things."
+
+"My dear Duchess--"
+
+"Don't interrupt me! I have an idea that you were perfectly aware of it.
+Perhaps it did not suit your plans. At any rate, you made statements to
+me concerning him which, as you very well knew, were likely to alter my
+entire opinion of him. I had an idea that there was some code of honour
+between men which kept them from discussing the private life of their
+friends with a woman. You seem to have been troubled with no such
+scruples. You told me things about Lawrence Mannering which made it
+absolutely necessary that I should hear them confirmed or denied from his
+own lips."
+
+"You would rather have remained in ignorance, then?" he asked.
+
+"I would rather have remained in ignorance," she repeated, calmly. "Don't
+flatter yourself, Sir Leslie, that a woman ever has any real gratitude in
+her heart for the person who, out of friendship, or some other motive,
+destroys her ideals. I should have married Lawrence Mannering if you had
+not spoken."
+
+Borrowdean was silent. In his heart he was thinking how nearly one of the
+most cherished schemes of his life had gone awry.
+
+"I am afraid, then," he said, "that even at the risk of your further
+displeasure I have no regrets to offer you."
+
+"I do not desire your regrets," she answered, scornfully. "You did what
+it suited you to do, and I presume you are satisfied. As for the rest, I
+can assure you that the relations between Mr. Mannering and myself are
+such that the balance of your political apple-cart is not likely to be
+disturbed. Now let us talk of something else. I have said all that I have
+to say on this matter--"
+
+Sir Leslie was not entirely satisfied with the result of his afternoon
+call. He walked slowly from Grosvenor Square to a small house in Sloane
+Gardens, in front of which a well-appointed victoria was waiting. He
+looked around at the well-filled window-boxes, thick with geraniums and
+marguerites, at the coachman's new livery, at the evidences of luxury
+which met him the moment the door was opened, and his lips parted in a
+faint, unpleasant smile.
+
+"Poor Mannering," he murmured to himself. "What a millstone!"
+
+Mrs. Phillimore was at home. She would certainly see Sir Leslie, the
+trim parlour-maid thought, with a smile. She left him alone in a
+flower-scented drawing-room, crowded with rococo furniture and many
+knick-knacks, where he waited more or less impatiently for nearly twenty
+minutes. Then Mrs. Phillimore swept into the room, elaborately gowned for
+her drive in the park, dispersing perfumes in all directions and
+bestowing a dazzling smile upon him.
+
+"I felt very much inclined not to see you at all," she declared. "How
+dared you keep away from me all this time? You haven't been near me since
+I moved in here. What do you think of my little house?"
+
+"Charming!" he declared.
+
+"Every one likes it," she remarked. "Such a time I had choosing the
+furniture. Hester wouldn't help with a single thing. You know that she
+has left me?"
+
+"I understood that she had gone to Mr. Mannering as secretary," he
+answered. "She has done typing for him for some time, hasn't she?"
+
+Mrs. Phillimore nodded.
+
+"Worships him, the little fool!" she remarked. "I must admit I detest
+clever men. You are all so dull, and such scheming brutes, too."
+
+Borrowdean smiled. A certain rough-and-ready humour about this woman
+always appealed to him. He looked around.
+
+"You seem to have done very nicely with that little offering," he said.
+
+"Oh, ready money goes a long way," she declared, carelessly.
+
+"And when it is spent?" he asked. "Five thousand pounds is not an
+inexhaustible sum."
+
+"By the time it is spent," she answered, "your party will be in, and I
+suppose you will make Lawrence something."
+
+Borrowdean regarded the woman thoughtfully.
+
+"Has it ever occurred to you," he asked, "that the time is likely to come
+when Mannering might want his money for himself? He might want to marry,
+for instance."
+
+She laughed mirthlessly, but without a shade of uneasiness.
+
+"You don't know Lawrence," she declared, scornfully. "He'd never do that
+whilst I was alive."
+
+"I am not so sure," Borrowdean answered, calmly. "Between ourselves,
+I cannot see that your claim upon him amounts to very much."
+
+"Then you're a fool!" she declared, brusquely.
+
+"No, I'm not," Borrowdean assured her, blandly. "Now I fancy that I could
+tell you something which would surprise you very much."
+
+"Has he been making love to any one?" she asked, quickly.
+
+"Something of the sort," he admitted. "Mannering is quixotic, of course,
+and that hermit life of his down in Norfolk has made him more so. Now he
+has come back again into the world it is just possible that he may see
+things differently. I flatter myself that I am a man of common sense. I
+know how the whole affair seems to me, and I tell you frankly that I can
+see nothing from the point of view of honour to prevent Mannering
+marrying any woman he chooses. I think it very possible that he may
+readjust his whole point of view."
+
+The woman looked around her, and outside, where her victoria was waiting.
+At last she had attained to an environment such as she had all her life
+desired. The very idea that at any moment it might be swept away sent a
+cold shiver through her. Borrowdean had a trick of speaking convincingly.
+And besides--
+
+"Who is the woman?" she asked.
+
+"I had been wondering," Borrowdean said, "whether it would not be better
+to tell you, so that you might be on your guard. The woman is the Duchess
+of Lenchester."
+
+She stared at him.
+
+"You're in earnest?"
+
+"Absolutely!"
+
+Her face hardened. Whatever other feelings she may have had for
+Mannering, she had lived so long with the thought that he belonged to
+her, at least as a wage-earning animal, a person whose province it
+was to make her ways smooth so far as his means permitted, that the
+thought of losing him stirred in her a dull, jealous anger.
+
+"I'd stop it!" she declared. "I'd go and tell her everything."
+
+"I am not sure," Borrowdean continued, smoothly, "that that would be the
+best course. Supposing that you were to tell her the story just as you
+told it to me. It is just possible that her point of view might be mine.
+She might regard Lawrence Mannering as a quixotic person, and endeavour
+to persuade him that your claim was scarcely so binding as he seems to
+imagine. In any case, I do not think that your story would prevent her
+marrying him."
+
+"Then all I can say is that she is a woman with a very queer sense of
+right and wrong," Mrs. Phillimore declared, angrily.
+
+Borrowdean smiled.
+
+"A woman," he said, "who is fond of a man is apt to have her judgment
+a little warped. The Duchess is a woman of fine perceptions and sound
+judgment. But she is attracted by Lawrence Mannering. She admires him.
+He is the sort of person who appeals to her imagination. These feelings
+might easily become, if they have not already developed into, something
+else. And I tell you again that I do not believe your story would stop
+her from marrying him."
+
+She leaned a little towards him.
+
+"What would?" she asked, earnestly.
+
+He hesitated.
+
+"Well," he said, "I think I could tell you that!"
+
+She held up her hand.
+
+"Stop, please," she said. "I want to ask you something else. Are you
+Lawrence's enemy?"
+
+"I? Why, of course not!"
+
+"Then where do you come in?" she asked, bluntly. "You couldn't persuade
+me that it is interest on my account which brings you here and makes you
+tell me these things. You don't care a button for me."
+
+Borrowdean took her hand and leaned forward in his chair. She snatched it
+away.
+
+"Oh, rot!" she exclaimed. "I may be a fool, but I'm not quite fool enough
+for that. I'm simply a useful person for the moment in some scheme of
+yours, and I just want to know what that scheme is. That's all! I'm not
+the sort of woman you'd waste a moment with, except for some purpose of
+your own. You've proved that. You wormed my story out of me very
+cleverly, but I haven't quite forgotten it yet, you know. And to tell you
+the truth," she continued, "you're not my sort, either. You and Lawrence
+Mannering are something of the same kidney after all, though he's worth
+a dozen of you. You've neither of you any time for play in the world, and
+that sort of man doesn't appeal to me. Now where do you come in?"
+
+Borrowdean looked at her thoughtfully. He had the air of a man a trifle
+piqued. Perhaps for the first time he realized that Blanche Phillimore
+was not altogether an unattractive-looking woman. If she had desired to
+stir him from his indifference she could not have chosen any more
+effectual means.
+
+"I am not going to argue with you," he said, quietly. "I have ambitions,
+it is true, and the world is not exactly a playground for me.
+Nevertheless, I am not an ascetic like Mannering. The world, the flesh
+and the devil are very much to me what they are to other men. But in a
+sense you have cornered me, and you shall have the truth. I want to marry
+the Duchess of Lenchester myself."
+
+She nodded.
+
+"That's right," she said. "Now we know where we are. You want to marry
+the Duchess, and therefore you don't want her to have Lawrence. You think
+that I can stop it, and as I don't want him married, either, you come to
+me. That is reasonable. Now how can I prevent it?"
+
+"By a slight variation from your story," he answered. "In fact, words are
+not needed. A suggestion only would be enough, and circumstances," he
+added, glancing around, "are strongly in favour of that suggestion."
+
+"You mean--"
+
+He shrugged his shoulders.
+
+"Mannering is security for your lease," he remarked. "You pay in his
+cheques to your bank every quarter. He occupies just that position which
+in a general way is capable of one explanation only."
+
+"Well?"
+
+"Let the Duchess believe him, or continue to believe him, to be an
+ordinary man--instead of a fool--and she will never marry him."
+
+"And she will you?"
+
+"I hope so!"
+
+She leaned back in her chair. He could not altogether understand her
+silence. Surely she could have no scruples?
+
+"It seems to me," she said at last, "that I am to play your game for
+nothing. I don't care so very much, after all, if he marries. He'd settle
+all he could on me. In fact, I should have just as much claim on him as I
+have now."
+
+"I did not say that you should play it for nothing," he answered. "I want
+us to understand each other, because I have an idea that you may be
+seeing something of the Duchess at any moment. Let us put it this way.
+Suppose I promise to give you a diamond necklace of the value of, say
+five thousand pounds, the day I marry the Duchess!"
+
+She rose and put pen and paper before him. He shook his head.
+
+"I can't put an arrangement of that sort on paper," he protested. "You
+must rely upon my word of honour."
+
+She held out the pen to him.
+
+"On paper, or the whole thing is off absolutely," she declared.
+
+"You won't trust me?"
+
+She looked at him.
+
+"There isn't much honour about an arrangement of this sort, is there?"
+she said. "It has to be on paper, or not at all."
+
+A carriage stopped outside. They heard the bell.
+
+"That," she remarked, "may be the Duchess of Lenchester."
+
+He caught up the pen and wrote a few hurried lines. The smile with which
+he handed it to her was not altogether successful.
+
+"After all, you know," he said, "there should be honour amongst thieves."
+
+"No doubt there is," she answered. "Only thieves are a cut above us,
+aren't they?"
+
+"I don't believe," Borrowdean said to himself, as he reached the
+pavement, "that that woman is such a fool as she seems."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+
+"CHERCHEZ LA FEMME"
+
+
+Mannering hated dinner parties, but this one had been a necessity.
+Nevertheless, if he had known who his companion for the evening was fated
+to be he would most certainly have stayed away. Her first question showed
+him that she had no intention of ignoring memories which to him were
+charged with the most subtle pain.
+
+He looked down the table, and back again into her face.
+
+"You are quite right," he said. "This is different. We cannot compare. We
+can judge only by effect--the effect upon ourselves."
+
+"Can you be analytical and yet remain within the orbit of my
+understanding?" she asked, with a faint smile. "If so, I should like to
+know exactly how you feel about it all."
+
+He passed a course with a somewhat weary gesture of refusal, and leaned
+back in his chair.
+
+"You are comprehensive--as usual," he remarked. "Just then I was
+wondering whether the perfume of these banks of hot-house flowers--I
+don't know what they are--was as sweet as the odour of the salt from
+the creeks, or my roses when the night wind touched them."
+
+"You were wondering! And what have you decided?"
+
+"Ah, I must not say. In any case you would not agree with me. Wasn't it
+you who once scoffed at my idyll in the wilderness?"
+
+"I do not think that I believe in idylls, nowadays," she answered. "One
+risks so many disappointments when one believes in anything."
+
+He raised his eyebrows.
+
+"You did not talk like this at Blakely," he remarked.
+
+"I am nearly a year older," she answered, "and a year wiser."
+
+"You pain me," he answered, with a little sigh. "You are a person of
+intelligence, and you talk of growing wiser with the years. Don't you
+know that the only supreme wisdom is the wisdom of the child? Our
+inherent ignorance is fed and nourished by experience."
+
+"You are hiding yourself," she remarked, "behind a fence of words--words
+that mean less than nothing! I don't suppose that even you would hesitate
+to admit that you have come into a larger world. You may have to pay for
+it. We all do. But at any rate it is an atmosphere which breeds men."
+
+"And changes women," he murmured, under his breath.
+
+She did not speak to him for several moments. Then the alteration in her
+tone and manner was almost marked.
+
+"You mentioned Blakely a few minutes ago," she said. "I wonder whether
+you remember our discussion there upon precisely what has come to pass."
+
+"Perfectly!"
+
+"I remember that in those days," she continued, reflectively, "you were
+very firm indeed, or was it my poor arguments that were at fault? Your
+vegetable and sentimental existence was a part of yourself. Ambition! You
+had forgotten what it was. Duty! You spouted individualism by the hour.
+Gratify my curiosity, won't you? Tell me what made you change your mind?"
+
+Mannering was silent for a moment. A close observer might have noticed
+a certain alteration in his face. A touch of the coming weariness was
+already there.
+
+"I have never changed my mind," he answered, quietly. "My inclinations
+to-day are what they have always been."
+
+She dropped her voice a little.
+
+"You puzzle me," she said, softly. "Do you mean that it was your sense of
+duty which was awakened?"
+
+"No, I do not mean that," he answered. "Forgive me--but I cannot tell you
+what I do mean. Circumstances brought me here against my will."
+
+"You talk like a slave," she said, lightly enough. She, too, was brave.
+She drank wine to keep the colour in her cheeks, and she told herself
+that the pain at her heart was nothing. Nevertheless, some words of
+Borrowdean's were mocking her all the while.
+
+"We are all slaves," he answered. "The folly of it all is when we stop to
+think. Then we realize it."
+
+Their conversation was like a strangled thing. Neither made any serious
+effort to re-establish it. It was a great dinner party, chiefly
+political, and long drawn out. Afterwards came a reception, and Mannering
+was at once surrounded. It was nearly midnight when by chance they came
+face to face again. She touched him with her fan, and leaned aside from
+the little group by whom she was surrounded.
+
+"Are you very much occupied, Mr. Mannering," she asked, lightly, "or
+could you spare me a moment?"
+
+He stopped short. Whatever surprise he may have felt he concealed.
+
+"I am entirely at your service, Duchess," he answered. "Mr. Harrison will
+excuse me, I am sure," he added, turning to his companion.
+
+She rested her fingers upon his arm. The house belonged to a relative of
+hers, and she knew where to find a quiet spot. When they were alone she
+did not hesitate for a moment.
+
+"Lawrence," she said, quietly, "will you imagine for a moment that we are
+back again at Blakely?"
+
+"I would to God we were!" he answered, impulsively. "That is--if you wish
+it too!"
+
+She did not answer at once. The sudden abnegation of his reserve took her
+by surprise. She had to readjust her words.
+
+"At least," she said, "there are many things about Blakely which I regret
+all the time. You know, of course, the chief one, our own altered selves.
+I know, Lawrence, that I need to ask your forgiveness. I came there under
+an assumed name, and I will admit that my coming was part of a scheme
+between Ronalds, Rochester and myself. Well, I am ready to ask your
+forgiveness for that. I don't think you ought to refuse it me. It doesn't
+alter anything that happened. It doesn't even affect it. You must believe
+that!"
+
+"I believe it, if you tell me so," he answered.
+
+"I do tell you," she declared. "I can explain it all. I am longing to
+have it all off my mind. But first of all, there is just one thing which
+I want to ask you."
+
+His face as he looked towards her gave her almost a shock. Very little
+was left of his healthy colouring. Already there were lines under his
+eyes, and he was certainly thinner. And there was something else which
+almost appalled her. There was fear in his manner. He sat like a man
+waiting for sentence, a man fore-doomed.
+
+"I want to know," she said, "what has brought you--here. I want to know
+what manner of persuasion has prevailed--when mine was so ineffectual.
+Don't think that I am not glad that you decided as you did. I am
+glad--very. You are in your rightful place, and I am only too thankful
+to hear about you, and read--and watch. But--we are jealous creatures, we
+women, you know, and I want to know whose and what arguments prevailed,
+when mine were so very insufficient."
+
+He answered her without hesitation, but his tone was dull and spiritless.
+
+"I cannot tell you!"
+
+There was a short silence. She gathered her skirts for a moment in her
+hand as though about to rise, but apparently changed her mind. She waited
+for some time, and then she spoke again.
+
+"Perhaps you think that I ought not to ask?"
+
+He looked at her hopelessly.
+
+"No, I don't think that. You have a right to ask. But it doesn't alter
+things, does it? I can't tell you."
+
+"You asked me to marry you."
+
+"It was at Blakely. We were so far out of the world--such a different
+world. I think that I had forgotten all that I wished to forget.
+Everything seemed possible there."
+
+"You mean that you would have married me and told me nothing of
+circumstances in your life, so momentous that they have practically
+exercised in this matter of your return to politics a compelling
+influence over you?"
+
+"I am sure," he said, "that I should not have told you!"
+
+His unhappiness moved her. She still lingered. She drew a little breath,
+and she went a good deal further than she had meant to go.
+
+"It has been suggested to me," she said, "that your reappearance was due
+to a woman's influence. Is this true?"
+
+"A woman had something to do with it," he admitted.
+
+"Who is she?"
+
+"Her name," he answered, "is Blanche Phillimore. It was the person to
+whom you yourself alluded."
+
+The Duchess maintained her self-control. She was quite pale, however, and
+her tone was growing ominously harder.
+
+"Is she a connection of yours?"
+
+"No!"
+
+"Is there anything which you could tell me about her?"
+
+"No!"
+
+"Yet at her bidding you have done--what you refused me."
+
+"I had no choice! Borrowdean saw to that," he remarked, bitterly.
+
+She rose to her feet. She was pale, and her lips were quivering, but she
+was splendidly handsome.
+
+"What sort of a man are you, Lawrence Mannering?" she asked, steadily.
+"You play at idealism, you asked me to marry you. Yet all the time there
+was this background."
+
+"It was madness," he admitted. "But remember it was Mrs. Handsell whom I
+asked to be my wife."
+
+"What difference does that make? She was a woman, too, I suppose, to be
+honoured--or insulted--by your choice!"
+
+"There was no question of insult, I think."
+
+She looked at him steadfastly. Perhaps for a moment her thoughts
+travelled back to those unforgotten days in the rose-gardens at Blakely,
+to the man whose delicate but wholesome joy in the wind and the sun and
+the flowers, the sea-stained marshes and the windy knolls where they had
+so often stood together, she could not forget. His life had seemed to her
+then so beautiful a thing. The elementary purity of his thoughts and
+aspirations were unmistakable. She told herself passionately that there
+must be a way out.
+
+"Lawrence," she said, "we are man and woman, not boy and girl. You asked
+me to marry you once, and I hesitated, only because of one thing. I do
+not wish to look into any hidden chambers of your life. I wish to know
+nothing, save of the present. What claim has this woman Blanche
+Phillimore upon you?"
+
+"It is her secret," he answered, "not mine alone."
+
+"She lives in your house--through her you are a poor man--through her you
+are back again, a worker in the world."
+
+"Yes!"
+
+"It must always be so?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"And you have nothing more to say?"
+
+"If I dared," he said, raising his eyes to hers, "I would say--trust me!
+I am not exactly--one of the beasts of the field."
+
+"Will you not trust me, then? I am not a foolish girl. I am a woman. You
+may destroy an ideal, but there would be something left."
+
+"I can tell you no more."
+
+"Then it is to be good-bye?"
+
+"If you say so!"
+
+She turned slowly away. He watched her disappear. Afterwards, with a
+curious sense of unreality, he remained quite still, his eyes still fixed
+upon the portiere through which she had passed.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III
+
+ONE OF THE "SUFFERERS"
+
+
+Mannering kept no carriage, and he left Downing Street on foot. The
+little house which he had taken furnished for the season was in the
+somewhat less pretentious neighborhood of Portland Crescent, and as there
+were no hansoms within hail he started to walk home. An attempt at a
+short cut landed him presently in a neighborhood which he failed to
+recognize. He paused, looking about him for some one from whom to inquire
+the way. Then he at once realized what he had already more than once
+suspected. He was being followed.
+
+The footsteps ceased as he himself had halted. It was a wet night, and
+the street was ill-lit. Nevertheless, Mannering could distinguish the
+figure of a man standing in the shadows of the houses, apparently to
+escape observation. For a moment he hesitated. His follower could
+scarcely be an ordinary hooligan, for not more than fifty yards away were
+the lights of a great thoroughfare, and even in this street, quiet though
+it was, there were people passing to and fro. His curiosity prompted him
+to subterfuge. He took a cigarette from his case, and commenced in a
+leisurely manner the operation of striking a light. Instantly the figure
+of the man began to move cautiously towards him.
+
+Mannering's eyes and hearing, keenly developed by his country life,
+apprised him of every step the man took. He heard him pause whilst a
+couple of women passed on the other side of the way. Afterwards his
+approach became swifter and more stealthy. Barely in time to avoid, he
+scarcely knew what, Mannering turned sharply round.
+
+"What do you want with me?" he demanded.
+
+The man showed no signs of confusion. Mannering, as he looked sternly
+into his face, lost all fear of personal assault. He was neatly but
+shabbily dressed, pale, and with a slight red moustache. He had a
+somewhat broad forehead, eyes with more than an ordinary lustre, and, in
+somewhat striking contradiction to the rest of his features, a large
+sensitive mouth with a distinctly humorous curve. Even now its corners
+were receding into a smile, which had in it, however, other elements than
+mirth alone.
+
+"You are Mr. Lawrence Mannering?"
+
+"That is my name," Mannering answered, "but if you want to speak to me
+why don't you come up like a man, instead of dogging my footsteps? It
+looked as though you wanted to take me by surprise. What is that you are
+hiding up your sleeve?"
+
+The man held it out, placed it even in Mannering's hand.
+
+"A life preserver, steel, as you see, and with a beautiful spring. Deadly
+weapon, isn't it, sir? Even a half-hearted sort of blow might kill a
+man."
+
+Mannering swung the weapon lightly in his hand. It cut the air with a
+soft, sickly swish.
+
+"What were you doing following me, on tiptoe, with this in your hand?" he
+asked, sternly.
+
+"Well," the man answered, as though forced to confess an unpleasant
+truth, "I am very much afraid that I was going to hit you with it."
+
+Mannering looked up and down the street for a policeman.
+
+"Indeed!" he said. "And may I ask why you changed your mind?"
+
+"It was an inspiration," the man answered, easily. "To tell you the
+truth, the clumsiness of the whole thing grated very much upon me.
+Personally, I ran no risk, don't think it was that. My escape was very
+carefully provided for. But one thinks quickly in moments of excitement,
+and it seemed to me as I took those last few steps that I saw a better
+way."
+
+"A better way," Mannering repeated, puzzled. "I am afraid I don't quite
+understand you. I presume that you meant to rob me. You would not have
+found it worth while, by the bye."
+
+The man laughed softly.
+
+"My dear sir," he exclaimed, "do I look like a robber? Rumour says that
+you are a poor man. I should think it very likely that, although I am not
+a rich one, I am at least as well off as you."
+
+Mannering looked out no more for the policeman. He was getting
+interested.
+
+"Come," he said, "I should like to understand what all this means. You
+were going to tap me on the head with this particularly unpleasant
+weapon, and your motive was not robbery. I am not aware of ever having
+seen you before. I am not aware of having an enemy in the world. Explain
+yourself."
+
+"I should be charmed," the man answered. "I do not wish to keep you
+standing here, however. Will you allow me to walk with you towards your
+home? You can retain possession of that little trifle, if you like," he
+added, pointing to the weapon which was still in Mannering's hand. "I can
+assure you that I have nothing else of the sort in my possession. You can
+feel my pockets, if you like."
+
+"I will take your word!" Mannering said. "I was on my way to Portland
+Crescent, but I fancy that I have taken a wrong turn."
+
+"We can get there this way," the man answered. "Excuse me one second."
+
+He paused, and lit a cigarette. Then with his hands behind his back he
+stepped out by Mannering's side.
+
+"What was that you said just now?" he remarked, "that you were not aware
+of having an enemy in the world? My dear sir, there was never a more
+extraordinary delusion. I should seriously doubt whether in the whole
+of the United Kingdom there is a man who has more. I know myself of a
+million or so who would welcome the news of your death to-morrow. I
+know of a select few who have opened, and will open their newspapers
+to-morrow, and for the next few days, in the hope of seeing your obituary
+notice."
+
+A light commenced to break in upon Mannering. He looked towards his
+companion incredulously.
+
+"You mean political opponents!" he exclaimed. "Is that what you are
+driving at all the time?"
+
+The man laughed softly.
+
+"My friend," he said--"excuse me, Mr. Mannering--you remind me
+irresistibly of _Punch's_ cartoon last week--the ostrich politician with
+his head in the sand. You have thrust yours very deep down indeed, when
+you talk of political opponents. Do you know what they call you in the
+North, sir?"
+
+"No!"
+
+"The enemy of the people! It isn't a pleasant title, is it?"
+
+"It is a false one!" Mannering declared, with a little note of passion
+quivering in his tone.
+
+"It is as true and certain as the judgment of God!" his companion
+answered, with almost lightning-like rapidity.
+
+There was a moment's silence. They passed a lamp-post, and Mannering,
+turning his head, scrutinized the other's features closely.
+
+"I should like to know who you are," he said, "and what your name is."
+
+"It is a reasonable curiosity," the man answered. "My name is Fardell,
+Richard Fardell, and I am a retired bookmaker."
+
+"A bookmaker!" Mannering repeated, incredulously.
+
+"Precisely. I should imagine from what I know of you, Mr. Mannering, that
+my occupation, or rather my late occupation, is not one which would
+appeal to you favourably. Very likely not! I don't see why it should
+myself. But at any rate, it taught me a lot about my fellow men. I did my
+business in shillings and half-crowns, you see. Did it with the working
+classes, the sort who used to go to a race-meeting for a jaunt, and just
+have a bit on for the sake of the sport. Took their missus generally, and
+made a holiday of it, and if they lost they'd grin and come and chaff me,
+and if they won they'd spend the money like lords. I made money, of
+course, bought houses, and made a lot more. Then business fell off. I
+didn't seem to meet with that cheerful holiday-making crew at any of the
+meetings up in the North, and I got sick of it. You see, I'd made sort
+of friends with them. They all knew Dicky Fardell, and I knew hundreds
+of 'em by sight. They'd come and mob me to stand 'em a drink when the
+wrong horse won, and I can tell you I never refused. They were always
+good-tempered, real sports to the backbone, and I tell you I was fond of
+'em. And then they left off coming. I couldn't understand it at first.
+The one or two who came talked of bad trade, and when I asked after their
+pals they shook their heads. They betted in shillings instead of
+half-crowns, and I didn't like the look of their faces when they lost.
+I tell you, it got so at last that I used to watch for the horse they'd
+put their bit on to win, and feel kind o' sick when it didn't. You can
+imagine I couldn't stand that sort of thing long. I chucked it, and I
+went to look for my pals. I wanted to find out what had become of them."
+
+Mannering looked at him curiously.
+
+"You found, I hope," he said, drily, "that the British workman had
+discovered a better investment for his shillings and half-crowns than the
+race-course."
+
+Mr. Richard Fardell smiled pleasantly, but tolerantly.
+
+"It's clear," he said, "that you, meaning no offence, Mr. Mannering, know
+nothing about the British workman. Whatever else he may be, he's a
+sportsman. He'll look after his wife and kids as well as the best of
+them, but he'll have his bit of sport so long as he's got a copper in his
+pocket. When he didn't come I put my kit on one side and went to look for
+him. I went, mind you, as his friend, and knowing a bit about him. And
+what I found has made a changed man of me."
+
+Mannering nodded.
+
+"I am afraid things are bad up in the North," he said. "You mustn't think
+that we people who are responsible for the laws of the country ignore
+this, Mr. Fardell. It is a very anxious time indeed with all of us.
+Still, I presume you study the monthly trade returns. Some industries
+seem prosperous enough."
+
+"I'm no politician," Fardell answered, curtly. "Figures don't interest
+me. They're just the drugs some of your party use to keep your conscience
+quiet. Things I see and know of are what I go by. And what I've seen, and
+what I know of, are just about enough to tear the heart out of any man
+who cares a row of pins about his fellows. Now I'm going to talk plain
+English to you, Mr. Mannering. I bought that little article you have in
+your pocket seriously meaning to knock you on the head with it. And that
+may come yet."
+
+Mannering looked at him in amazement.
+
+"But my dear sir," he said, "what is your grievance against me? I have
+always considered myself a people's politician."
+
+"Then the people may very well say 'save me from my friends'," Fardell
+answered, grimly. "Mind, I believe you're honest, or you'd be lying on
+your back now with a cracked skull. But you are using a great influence
+on the wrong side. You're standing between the people and the one
+reasonable scheme which has been brought forward which has a fair chance
+of changing their condition."
+
+Then Mannering began to understand.
+
+"I oppose the scheme you speak of," he answered, "simply because I don't
+believe in it. Every man has a right to his opinion. I don't believe for
+a moment that it would improve the present condition of things."
+
+"Then what is your scheme?" Fardell asked.
+
+"My scheme!" Mannering repeated. "I don't quite understand you!"
+
+"Of course you don't," Fardell answered, vigourously. "You can weave
+academic arguments, you can make figures and statistics dance to any
+damned tune you please. If I tried to argue with you, you'd squash me
+flat. And what's it all come to? My pals must starve for the
+gratification of your intellectual vanity. You won't listen to Tariff
+Reform. Then what do you propose, to light the forges and fill the
+mills? Nothing! I say, unless you've got a counter scheme of your own,
+you ought to try ours."
+
+"Come, Mr. Fardell," Mannering said, "I can assure you that all I have
+said and written is the outcome of honest thought. I--"
+
+"Stop!" Fardell exclaimed. "Honest thought! Yes! Where? In your study.
+That's where you theorists do your mischief. You can't make laws for the
+people in your study. You can't tell the status of the workingman from
+the figures you read in your study. You're like half the smug people in
+the world who discuss this question in the railway carriages and in their
+clubs. I've heard 'em till I'd like to shove their self-opinionated
+arguments down their throats, strip their clothes off their backs, and
+send them down to live with my pals, or starve with them. Any little
+idiot who buys a penny paper and who's doing pretty well for himself,
+thinks he can lay down the law about Free Trade. You're all of one
+kidney, sir! You none of you realize this. There are men as good as any
+of you, whose wives and children are as dear to them as yours to you,
+who've got to see them get thinner and thinner, who don't know where to
+get a day's work or lay their hands upon a copper, and all the while
+their kids come crying to them for something to eat. Put yourself in
+their place, sir, and try and realize the torture of it. I've been
+amongst 'em. I've spent half of what I made, and a good many thousands it
+was, buying food for them. Can you wonder that my fingers have itched for
+the throats of these smug, prosperous pigs, who spurt platitudes and
+think things are very well as they are because they're making their
+little bit? What right have you--any of you--to hesitate for a second to
+try any means to help those poor devils, unless you've got a better
+scheme of your own? Will you tell me that, sir?"
+
+They had reached Mannering's house, and he threw open the gate.
+
+"You must come in with me and talk about these things," Mannering said,
+gravely. "You seem to be the sort of person I've been wanting to meet for
+a long time."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV
+
+DEBTS OF HONOUR
+
+
+Berenice found the following morning a note from Borrowdean, which caused
+her some perplexity.
+
+ "If you really care," he said, "to do Mannering a good turn, look his
+ niece up now and then. I am afraid that young woman has rather lost her
+ head since she came to London, and she is making friends who will do
+ her no particular good."
+
+Berenice ordered her carriage early, and drove round to Portland
+Crescent.
+
+"My dear child," she exclaimed, as Clara came into the room, "what have
+you been doing with yourself? You look ghastly!"
+
+Clara shrugged her shoulders, and looked at herself in a mirror.
+
+"I do look chippy, don't I?" she remarked. "I've been spending the
+week-end down at Bristow."
+
+"At Bristow?" Berenice repeated. Her voice spoke volumes. Clara looked up
+a little defiantly.
+
+"Yes! We had an awful spree! I like it there immensely, only--"
+
+Berenice looked up.
+
+"I notice," she remarked, "that there is generally an 'only' about people
+who have spent week-ends at Bristow. They play cards there, don't they,
+until daylight? Some one once told me that they kept a professional
+croupier for roulette!"
+
+"That horrid game!" Clara exclaimed. "Please don't mention it. I've
+scarcely slept a wink all night for thinking of it."
+
+Berenice looked at her in surprise.
+
+"Do you mean to say," she inquired, deliberately, "that they allowed you
+to play--and lose?"
+
+"It wasn't their fault I lost," Clara answered. "Oh, what a fool I was.
+Bobby Bristow showed me a system. It seemed so easy. I didn't think I
+could possibly lose. It worked beautifully at first. I thought that I was
+going to pay all my bills, and have lots of money to spend. Then I
+doubled the stakes--I wanted to win a lot--and everything went wrong!"
+
+"How much did you lose?" Berenice asked. Clara shivered.
+
+"Don't ask me!" she cried. "Sir Leslie Borrowdean gave his own cheques
+for all my I.O.U.'s. He is coming to see me some time to-day. I don't
+know what I shall say to him."
+
+"Do you mean to go on playing?" Berenice asked, quietly, "or is this
+experience enough for you?"
+
+"I shall never sit at a roulette table again as long as I live," she
+declared. "I hate the very thought of it."
+
+"Then you can just ask Sir Leslie the amount of the I.O.U.'s, and tell
+him that he shall have a cheque in the morning," Berenice said. "I will
+lend you the money."
+
+Clara gave a little gasp.
+
+"You are too kind," she exclaimed, "but I don't know when I shall be able
+to repay you. It is--nearly three hundred pounds!"
+
+"So long as you keep your word," Berenice answered, "and do not play
+again, you need never let that trouble you. You shall have the cheque
+before two o'clock. No, please don't thank me. If you take my advice you
+won't spend another week-end at Bristow. It is not a fit house for young
+girls. How is your uncle?"
+
+"I haven't seen him this morning," Clara answered. "Perkins told me that
+he came home after midnight with a man whom he seemed to have picked up
+in the street, and they were in the study talking till nearly five this
+morning."
+
+Berenice rose.
+
+"I came to see if you would care to drive down to Ranelagh with me this
+morning," she said, "but you are evidently fit for nothing except to go
+back to bed again. I won't forget the cheque, and remember me to your
+uncle. By the bye, where's that nice young man who used to be always with
+you down in the country?"
+
+"You must mean Mr. Lindsay," Clara answered. "I have no idea. At Blakely,
+I suppose."
+
+"If I were you," Berenice said, as she rose, "I should write to him to
+come up and look after you. You need it!"
+
+She nodded pleasantly and took her leave. Clara threw herself into a
+chair and rang the bell.
+
+"Perkins," she said, "I have had no sleep and no breakfast. What should
+you recommend?"
+
+"An egg beaten up in milk, miss," the man suggested, "same as I've just
+taken Mr. Mannering."
+
+"Is my uncle up?" Clara asked.
+
+"Not yet, miss," the man answered; "He is just dressing."
+
+Clara nodded.
+
+"Very well. Please get me what you said, and if Sir Leslie Borrowdean
+calls I want to see him at once."
+
+"Sir Leslie is in the study now, miss," the man answered. "I showed him
+in there because I thought he would want to see Mr. Mannering, but he
+asked for you."
+
+"Will you say that I shall be there in three minutes," Clara said.
+
+The three minutes became rather a long quarter of an hour, but Clara had
+used the time well. When she entered the library she had changed her
+dress, rearranged her hair, and by some means or another had lost her
+unnatural pallor. Sir Leslie greeted her a little gravely,
+
+"Glad to see you looking so fit," he remarked. "They did us a bit too
+well down at Bristow, I thought. It's all very well for you children,"
+he continued, with a smile, "but when a man gets to my time of life he
+misses a night's rest."
+
+She smiled.
+
+"You don't call yourself old, Sir Leslie!" she remarked.
+
+"Well, I'm not young, although I like to think I am," he answered. "I'm
+afraid there's pretty nearly a generation between us, Miss Clara. By the
+bye, where's your uncle this morning?"
+
+"Getting up," she answered. "He did not go to bed until after five,
+Perkins tells me. He brought some one home with him from Dorchester's
+reception, or some one he picked up afterwards, and they seem to have sat
+up talking all night."
+
+Borrowdean was interested.
+
+"You have no idea who it was, I suppose?" he asked.
+
+She shook her head.
+
+"None at all. Perkins had never seen him before. When do you poor
+creatures get your holiday, Sir Leslie?"
+
+He smiled.
+
+"The session will be over in about three weeks," he answered, "unless we
+defeat the Government before then. Your uncle has been hitting them very
+hard lately. I think before long we shall be in office."
+
+"Politics," she said, "seems to be rather a greedy sort of business. You
+are always trying to turn the other side out, aren't you?"
+
+"You must remember," he answered, "that politics is rather a one-sided
+sort of affair. The party which is in makes a very comfortable living
+out of it, and we who are out have to scrape along as best we can. Rather
+hard upon people like your uncle and myself, who are, comparatively
+speaking, poor men. That reminds me," he said, bringing out his
+pocket-book, "I thought that I had better bring you these little
+documents."
+
+"Those horrid I.O.U.'s," she remarked.
+
+"Yes," he answered. "I am sorry that you were so unlucky. I bought these
+from the bank, Miss Clara, as I thought you would not feel comfortable if
+you had to leave Bristow owing this money to strangers."
+
+"It was very thoughtful of you," she murmured. He changed his seat and
+came over to her side on the sofa.
+
+"Have you any idea how much they come to?" he asked, smoothing them out
+upon his knee.
+
+"I am afraid to nearly three hundred pounds," she answered.
+
+He shook his head gravely.
+
+"I am sorry to say that they come to a good deal more than that," he
+said. "I hope you do not forget that I took the liberty of advising you
+more than once to stop. You had the most abominable luck."
+
+"More than three hundred?" she gasped. "How much more?"
+
+"They seem to add up to five hundred and eighty five pounds," he
+declared. "I must confess that I was surprised myself."
+
+"There--I think there must be some mistake," Clara faltered.
+
+He handed them to her.
+
+"You had better look them through," he said. "They seem all right."
+
+She took them in her hand, and looked at them helplessly. There was one
+there for fifty pounds which she tried in vain to remember--and how shaky
+her handwriting was. A sudden flood of recollection brought the colour
+into her cheeks. She remembered the long table, the men all smoking, the
+women most of them a little hard, a little too much in earnest--the soft
+click of the ball, the silent, sickening moments of suspense. Others had
+won or lost as much as she, but perhaps because she had been so much in
+earnest, her ill-luck had attracted some attention. She remembered Major
+Bristow's whispered offer, or rather suggestion, of help. Even now her
+cheeks burned at something in his tone or look.
+
+"I suppose it's all right," she said, dolefully, "only it's a lot more
+than I thought. I shall have three hundred pounds in the morning, but
+I've no idea where to get the rest."
+
+"You are sure about the three hundred?" Sir Leslie asked, quietly.
+
+"Quite."
+
+"Then I think that you had better let me lend you the rest, for the
+present," he suggested. "I am afraid your uncle would be rather annoyed
+to know that you had been gambling to such an extent. You may be able to
+think of some way of paying me back later on."
+
+She looked up at him hesitatingly. There was nothing in his manner which
+suggested in the least what Major Bristow had almost pronounced. She drew
+a little breath of relief. He was so much older, and after all, he was
+her uncle's friend.
+
+"Can you really spare it, Sir Leslie?" she asked. "I can't tell you how
+grateful I should be."
+
+He looked down at her with a faint smile.
+
+"I can spare it for the present," he answered. "Only if you see any
+chance of paying me back before long, do so."
+
+"You will pardon my interference," said an ominously quiet voice from the
+doorway, "but may I inquire into the nature of this transaction between
+you and my niece, Sir Leslie? Perhaps you had better explain it, Clara!"
+
+They both turned quickly round. Mannering was standing upon the
+threshold, the morning paper in his hand. Clara sank into a chair and
+covered her face with her hands. Sir Leslie shrugged his shoulders.
+
+He was congratulating himself upon the discretion with which he had
+conducted the interview. He had for a few moments entertained other
+ideas.
+
+"Perhaps you will allow me to explain--" he began.
+
+"I should prefer to hear my niece," Mannering answered, coldly.
+
+Clara looked up. She was pale and frightened, and she had hard work to
+choke down the sobs.
+
+"Sir Leslie was down at Bristow, where I was staying--this last
+week-end," she explained. "I lost a good deal of money there at roulette.
+He very kindly took up my I.O.U.'s for me, and was offering when you came
+in to let it stand for a little time."
+
+"What is the amount?" Mannering asked.
+
+Clara did not answer. Her head sank again. Her uncle repeated his
+inquiry. There was no note of anger in his tone. He might have been
+speaking of an altogether indifferent matter.
+
+"I am afraid I shall have to trouble you to tell me the exact amount," he
+said. "Perhaps, Borrowdean, you would be so good as to inform me, as my
+niece seems a little overcome."
+
+"The amount of the I.O.U.'s for which I gave my cheque," Borrowdean said,
+"was five hundred and eighty-seven pounds. I have the papers here."
+
+There was a dead silence for a moment or two. Clara looked up furtively,
+but she could learn nothing from her uncle's face. It was some time
+before he spoke. When at last he did, his voice was certainly a little
+lower and less distinct than usual.
+
+"Did I understand you to say--five hundred and eighty-seven pounds?"
+
+"That is the amount," Borrowdean admitted. "I trust that you do not
+consider my interference in any way officious, Mannering. I thought it
+best to settle the claims of perfect strangers against Miss Mannering."
+
+"May I ask," Mannering continued, "in whose house my niece was permitted
+to lose this sum?"
+
+"It was at the Bristows'," Clara answered.
+
+"And under whose chaperonage were you?" Mannering asked.
+
+"Lady Bristow's! She called for me here, and took me down last Friday."
+
+"Are these people who are generally accounted respectable?" Mannering
+asked.
+
+"I don't think that Bristow is much better or worse than half of our
+country houses," Borrowdean answered. "People who are at all in the swim
+must have excitement nowadays, you know. Bristow himself isn't very
+popular, but people go to the house."
+
+Mannering made no further remark.
+
+"If you will come into the study, Borrowdean," he said, "I will settle
+this matter with you."
+
+Borrowdean hesitated.
+
+"Your niece said something about having three hundred pounds," he
+remarked.
+
+Mannering glanced towards her.
+
+"I think," he said, "that that must be a mistake. My niece has no such
+sum at her command."
+
+Clara rose to her feet.
+
+"You may as well know everything," she said. "The Duchess of Lenchester
+came in and found me very unhappy this morning. I told her everything,
+and she offered to lend me the money. I told her then that it was only
+three hundred pounds. I thought that was all I owed."
+
+"Have you made any other confidants?" Mannering asked.
+
+"No!"
+
+"You will return the Duchess's cheque," Mannering said. "Borrowdean, will
+you come this way?"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V
+
+LOVE _versus_ POLITICS
+
+
+Berenice was a little annoyed. It was the hour before dressing for dinner
+which she always devoted to repose--the hour saved from the stress of the
+day which had helped towards keeping her the young woman she certainly
+was. Yet Borrowdean's message was too urgent to ignore. She suffered her
+maid to wrap some sort of loose gown about her, and received him in her
+own study.
+
+"My dear Sir Leslie," she said, a little reproachfully, "was this really
+necessary? You know that after half-past six I am practically a person
+not existing--until dinner time!"
+
+"I should not have ventured to intrude upon you," Borrowdean said,
+quickly, "if the circumstances had not been altogether exceptional.
+I know your habits too well. I have just come from Mannering."
+
+"From Mannering--yes!"
+
+"Duchess," Borrowdean said, "have you--forgive a blunt question--but have
+you any influence over him?"
+
+Berenice was silent for several moments.
+
+"You ask me rather a hard question," she said. "A few months ago I think
+that I should have said yes. To-day--I am not sure. What has happened?
+Is anything wrong with him?"
+
+"Nothing, except that he seems to have gone mad," Borrowdean said,
+bitterly. "I went to him to-day to get him to fix the dates for his
+meetings at Glasgow and Leeds. What do you think his answer was?"
+
+"Don't tell me that he wants to back out!" Berenice exclaimed. "Don't
+tell me that!"
+
+"Almost as bad! He told me quite coolly that he was not prepared finally
+to set out his views upon the question until he had completed a course of
+personal investigation in some of the Northern centres of trade, to which
+he had committed himself."
+
+Berenice looked bewildered.
+
+"But what on earth does he mean?" she exclaimed. "Surely he knows all
+that there is to be known. His mastery of statistics is something
+wonderful."
+
+"What he means no man save himself can even surmise," Borrowdean
+answered. "He told me that he had had information of a state of distress
+in some of our Northern towns--Newcastle and Hull he mentioned, and some
+of the Lancashire places--which had simply appalled him. He was
+determined to verify it personally, and to commit himself to nothing
+further until he had done so. And he even asked me if I could not find
+him a pair until the end of the session, so that he could get away at
+once. I was simply dumbfounded. A pair for Mannering!"
+
+Berenice rose to her feet. She walked up and down the little room
+restlessly.
+
+"Sir Leslie," she said at last, "I am not sure whether I have what you
+would call any influence over Mr. Mannering now or not. I might have had
+but for you!"
+
+"For me?" Borrowdean exclaimed.
+
+"Yes. It was you who told me of--of--that woman," she said, haughtily,
+but with the colour rising almost to her temples. "After that, of course
+things were different between us. We are scarcely upon such terms at
+present as would justify my interference."
+
+Borrowdean dropped his eyeglass, and swung it deliberately by its black
+ribbon. He looked steadily at Berenice, but his eyes seemed to travel
+past her.
+
+"My dear Duchess," he said, quietly, "the game of life is a great one to
+play, and we who would keep our hands upon the board must of necessity
+make sacrifices. It is your duty to disregard in this instance your
+feelings towards Mannering. You must consider only his feelings towards
+you. They are such, I believe, as to give you a hold over him. You must
+make use of that hold for the sake of a great cause."
+
+Berenice raised her eyebrows.
+
+"Indeed! You seem to forget, Sir Leslie, that my share in this game, as
+you call it, must always be a passive one. I have no office to gain, no
+rewards to reap. Why should I commit myself to an unpleasant task for the
+sake of you and your friends?"
+
+"It is your party," he protested. "Your party as much as ours."
+
+"Granted," she answered. "Yet who are the responsible members of it? You
+know my opinion of Mannering as a politician. I would sooner follow him
+blindfold than all the others with my eyes open. Whatever he may lack, he
+is the most honest and right-seeing politician who ever entered the
+House."
+
+"He lacks but one thing," Borrowdean said, "the mechanical adjustment
+of the born politician to party matters. There was never a time when
+absolute unity and absolute force were so necessary. If he is going to
+play the intelligent inquirer, if he falters for one moment in his
+wholesale condemnation of this scheme, he loses the day for himself and
+for us. The one thing which the political public never forgives is
+the man who stops to think."
+
+"What do you want me to do?" Berenice asked.
+
+"To go to him and find out what he means, what influences have been at
+work, what is underneath it all. Warn him of the danger of even appearing
+doubtful, or for a moment lukewarm. The one person whom the public will
+not have in politics is the trifler. Think how many there have been,
+brilliant men, too, who have lost their places through a single false
+step, a single year, a month of dilettantism. Remind him of them. The man
+who moves in a great cause may move slowly, if you will, but he must move
+all the time. Remind him, too, that he is risking the one great chance of
+his life!"
+
+"He is to be Premier, then?" she asked.
+
+"Yes! There is no alternative!"
+
+"Very well, then," she said, "I will go. I make no promises, mind. I will
+listen to what he has to say. I will put our view of the situation before
+him. But I make no promises. It is possible, even, that I shall come to
+his point of view, whatever it may be."
+
+Borrowdean smiled.
+
+"I have no fear of that," he declared, "but at least it would be
+something to know what this point of view is. You will find him in a
+queer mood. That little fool of a niece of his has been getting in with
+a fast set, and making the money fly. You have heard of her last escapade
+at Bristow?"
+
+Berenice nodded.
+
+"Yes," she said. "I went there this morning directly I had your note.
+I feel rather self-reproachful about Clara Mannering. I meant to have
+looked after her more. She is rather an uninteresting young woman,
+though, and I am afraid I have let her drift away."
+
+"She will be all right with a little looking after," Borrowdean said.
+"Forgive me, but it is getting late."
+
+"I will go at once," she said.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Afterwards she wondered often at that strange, uncertain fluttering of
+the heart, the rush and glow of feelings warmer than any which had lately
+stirred her, which seemed in those first few minutes of their being
+together, to make an altered woman of her. Mannering, as he entered the
+room, pale and listless, was conscious at once of a foreign element in
+it, something which stirred his somewhat slow-beating pulse, too, which
+seemed to bring back to him a flood of delicious memories, the perfume of
+his rose-gardens at evening, the soft night music of his wind-stirred
+cedars. She had thrown aside her opera cloak. The delicate lines of her
+bust seemed to have expanded with the unusual rise and fall of her bosom.
+A faint rose-tint flush of streaming colour had stained the ivory
+whiteness of her skin--her eyes as they sought his were soft, almost
+liquid. They met so seldom alone--and she was alone now with him in the
+room which was so characteristically his own, a room with many
+indications of his constant presence, which one by one she had been
+realizing with curiously quickened pulses during the few minutes of
+waiting. On her way here, driving in an open victoria, through the soft
+summer evening, she had seemed to be pursued everywhere by a new world of
+sensuous suggestions. Of the many carriages which she had passed, hers
+alone seemed to savour of loneliness. She was the only beautiful woman
+who sat alone and companionless. In a momentary block she had seen a man
+in a neighbouring hansom slip his hand, a strong, brown, well-looking
+hand, under the apron, to hold for a moment the fingers of the woman who
+sat by his side--Berenice had caught the answering smile, she had seen
+him lean forward and whisper something which had brought a deeper flush
+into her own cheeks and a look into her eyes, half amused, half tender.
+These were rare moments with her, these moments of sentiment--perhaps for
+that reason all the more dangerous. She forgot almost the cause of her
+coming. She remembered only that she was alone with the one man whose
+voice had the power to thrill her, whose touch would call up into life
+the great hidden forces of her own passionate nature. The memory of all
+other things passed away from her like a cloud gone from the face of the
+sun. She leaned towards him. His face was full of wonder--wonder, and the
+coming joy.
+
+"Berenice!" he exclaimed.
+
+She let herself drift down the surging tide of this suddenly awakened
+passion. She held out her arms and pressed her lips on his as he caught
+her.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Presently she pushed him gently away--held him there at arm's length.
+
+"This is too absurd," she murmured, and drew him once more towards her
+with a choking little laugh. "I came for something quite different!"
+
+"What does it matter what you came for, so long as you stay," he
+answered. "Say that you came to bring a glimpse of paradise to a lonely
+man!"
+
+She disengaged herself, and her long white fingers strayed mechanically
+to her tumbled hair. The elegant precision of her toilette had given
+place to a most distracting disarray. She felt her cheeks burning still,
+and the lace at her bosom was all crushed.
+
+"And I was on my way to a dinner party," she whispered, with humorously
+uplifted eyebrows. "I must drive back home, and--and--"
+
+"And what?" he demanded.
+
+"And send an excuse," she declared, demurely. "I am not equal to a family
+dinner party."
+
+"And afterwards?"
+
+She smiled.
+
+"Would you like," she asked, "to take me out to dinner?"
+
+"Would I like!"
+
+"Go and change, and call for me in half an hour. We can go somewhere
+where we are not likely to be seen," she said, softly. "I must cover
+myself up in my cloak. Whatever will Perkins say? Please remember that
+I have no hat."
+
+He held her hands and looked into her eyes.
+
+"Don't go for one moment," he pleaded. "I want to realize it. I want to
+feel sure of you."
+
+The gravity of his manner was for a moment reflected in her tone.
+
+"I think," she said, "that you may feel sure. There are things which we
+may have to say to one another--presently--but--"
+
+He stooped and kissed her fingers.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI
+
+THE CONSCIENCE OF A STATESMAN
+
+
+He was shown into her own little boudoir by a smiling maid-servant, who
+seemed already to treat him with an especial consideration. The wonder of
+this thing was still lying like a thrall upon him, and yet he knew that
+the joy of life was burning once more in his veins. He caught sight of
+himself in a mirror, and he was amazed. The careworn look had gone from
+his eyes, the sallowness from his complexion. His step was elastic, he
+felt the firm, quick beat of his heart, even his pulses seem to throb to
+a new and a wonderful tune. These moments whilst he waited for her were a
+joy to him. The atmosphere was fragrant with the perfume of her favourite
+roses, a book lay upon the little inlaid table face downwards as she had
+left it. There was a delicately engraved etching upon the wall, which he
+recognized as her work; the watercolours, all of a French school which he
+had often praised, were of her choosing. Perfect though the room was in
+colouring and detail, there was yet a habitable, almost a homely, air
+about it. Mannering moved about amidst her treasures like a man in a
+dream, only it was a dream of loneliness gone forever, of a grey life
+suddenly coloured and transformed. It was wonderful.
+
+Then the soft swish of a skirt, and she came in. She had changed her
+gown. She wore white lace, with a string of pearls about her neck. He
+looked eagerly into her face, and a great relief took the place of that
+single instant of haunting fear. The change was still there. It was not
+the great lady who swept in, but the woman who has found an answer to
+the one question of life, a little tremulous still, a little less
+self-assured. She looked at him almost appealingly. A delicate tinge of
+colour lingered in her cheeks. He moved quickly forward to meet her.
+
+"Dear!" she murmured.
+
+He raised her hand to his lips. He was satisfied.
+
+"You see what my new-born vanity has led to," she declared, smilingly. "I
+have had to keep you waiting whilst I changed my gown. I hope you like me
+in white."
+
+"You are adorable," he declared.
+
+She laughed.
+
+"I wonder," she said, "would you mind dining here alone with me? It will
+be quite a scratch meal, but I thought that it would be cosier than a
+restaurant, and afterwards--we could come in here and talk."
+
+"I should like it better than anything in the world," he declared,
+truthfully.
+
+"You may take me in, then," she said. "I hope that you are as hungry as
+I am. No, not that way. I have ordered dinner to be served in the little
+room where I dine when I am alone."
+
+To Mannering there seemed something almost unreal about the chaste
+perfection of the meal and its wonderful service. They dined at a small
+round table, so small that more than once their fingers touched upon the
+tablecloth. A single servant waited upon them, swiftly and perfectly. The
+butler appeared only with the wine, which he served, and quietly
+withdrew. Across the tangled mass of flowers, only a few feet away all
+the time, sat the woman who had suddenly made the world so beautiful to
+him. A murmur of conversation continually flowed between them, but he was
+never very sure what they were talking about. He wanted to sit still, to
+feast his eyes, all his senses, upon her, to strive to realize this new
+thing, that from henceforth she was his! And then suddenly she broke the
+spell. She leaned back in her chair and laughed softly.
+
+"I have just remembered," she said, in response to his inquiring look,
+"why I came to call upon you this evening. What a long time ago it
+seems."
+
+He smiled.
+
+"And I never thought to ask you," he remarked.
+
+"We must have no secrets now," she said, with a delightful smile. "Leslie
+Borrowdean came to see me this afternoon, and he was very anxious about
+you. He declared that you wanted to postpone your great meetings in the
+North until after you had made some independent investigations in some of
+the manufacturing centres. Poor Sir Leslie! You had frightened him so
+completely that he was scarcely coherent."
+
+Mannering smiled a little gravely. It was like coming back to earth.
+
+"Politics with Borrowdean are so much a matter of pounds, shillings and
+pence that the bare idea of his finding himself a day further away from
+office frightens him to death," he said. "We are all like the pawns, to
+be moved about the chessboard of his life."
+
+Berenice smiled.
+
+"He is certainly a very self-centred person," she remarked; "but do
+you know, I am really a little curious to know how you succeeded in
+frightening him so thoroughly."
+
+"I had a fright myself," Mannering said. "I was made to feel for an hour
+or so like a Rip van Winkle with the cobwebs hanging about me--Rip van
+Winkle looking out upon a new world!"
+
+"You a Rip van Winkle!" she laughed. "What was it that man who wrote in
+the _Nineteenth Century_ called you last week? 'The most precise and
+far-seeing of our politicians.'"
+
+"The men who write in reviews," he murmured, "sometimes display the most
+appalling ignorance. There was also some one in the _Saturday Review_ who
+alluded to me last week as a library politician. My friend quoted that
+against me. 'A man who essays to govern a people he knows nothing of.' It
+was one of the labour party who wrote it, I know, but it sticks."
+
+"You are not losing confidence in yourself, surely?" she remarked,
+smiling.
+
+"My views are unchanged, if that is what you mean," he answered. "I
+believe I know what is good for the people, and when I am sure of it I
+shall not be afraid to take up the gauntlet. But I must be quite sure."
+
+"You puzzle me a little," she admitted. "Has any one written more
+convincingly than you? Arguments which are founded upon logic and
+statistics must yield truth, and you have set it down in black and
+white."
+
+"On the other hand," he said, "my unlearned but eloquent friend dismissed
+all statistics, all the science of argument and deduction, with the wave
+of a not too scrupulously clean hand. 'Figures,' he said, 'are dead
+things. They are the playthings of the charlatan politician, who, by a
+sort of mental sleight of hand, can make them perform the most wonderful
+antics. If you desire the truth, seek it from live things. If you desire
+really to call yourself the champion of the people, come and see for
+yourself how they are faring. Figures will not feed them, nor statistics
+keep them from the great despair. Come and let me show you the sinews of
+the country, whether they are sound or rotten. You cannot see them
+through your library walls. It is only the echo of their voice which you
+hear so far off. If you would really be the people's man, come and learn
+something of the people from their own lips.' This is what my friend said
+to me."
+
+"And who," she asked, "was this prophet who came to you and talked like
+this?"
+
+"A retired bookmaker," he answered. "I will tell you of our meeting."
+
+She listened gravely. After he had finished there was a short silence.
+The dessert was on the table, and they were alone. Berenice was looking
+thoughtful.
+
+"Tell me," he begged, "exactly what that wrinkled forehead means?"
+
+"I was wondering," she said, "whether Sir Leslie was right, when he said
+that you had too much conscience ever to be a great politician."
+
+"It mirrors Borrowdean's outlook upon politics precisely," he remarked.
+
+She smiled at him with a sudden radiance. She had risen to her feet, and
+with a quick, graceful movement leaned over him. This new womanliness
+which he had found so irresistible was alight once more in her face. Her
+eyes sought his fondly, she touched his lips with hers. The perfume of
+her clothes, the touch of her hair upon his cheek, were like a drug. He
+had no more words.
+
+"You may have one peach and one glass of the Prince's Burgundy, and then
+you must come and look for me," she said. "We have wasted too much time
+talking of other things. You haven't even told me yet what I have a right
+to hear, you know. I want to be told that you care for me better than
+anything else in the world."
+
+He caught her hands. There was a rare passion vibrating in his tone.
+
+"You do not doubt it, Berenice?"
+
+"Perhaps not," she answered, "but I want to be told. I am a middle-aged
+woman, you know, Lawrence, but I want to be made love to as though I were
+a silly girl! Isn't that foolish? But you must do it," she whispered,
+with her lips very close to his.
+
+He drew her into his arms.
+
+"I am not at all sure," he said, "that I have enough courage to make love
+to a Duchess!"
+
+"Then you can remember only that I am a woman," she whispered, "very,
+very, very much a woman, and--I'm afraid--a woman shockingly in love!"
+
+She disengaged herself suddenly, and was at the door before he could
+reach it. She looked back. Her cheeks were flushed. There was even a
+faint tinge of pink underneath the creamy white of her slender, stately
+neck.
+
+"Don't dare," she said, "to be more than five minutes!"
+
+Mannering poured himself out a glass of wine, and sat quite still with
+his head between his hands. He wanted to realize this thing if he could.
+The grinding of the great wheels fell no more upon his ears. He looked
+into a new world, so different from the old that he was almost afraid.
+
+And in her room, Berenice waited for him impatiently.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII
+
+A BLOW FOR BORROWDEAN
+
+
+There was a somewhat unusual alertness in Borrowdean's manner as he
+passed out from the little house in Sloane Gardens and summoned a passing
+hansom. He drove to the corner of Hyde Park, and dismissing the cab
+strolled along the broad walk.
+
+The many acquaintances whom he passed and repassed he greeted with a
+certain amount of abstraction. All the time he kept his eyes upon the
+road. He was waiting to catch sight of some familiar liveries. When at
+last they came he contrived to stop the carriage and hastily threaded his
+way to the side of the barouche.
+
+Berenice was looking radiantly beautiful. The exquisite simplicity of her
+white muslin gown and large hat of black feathers, the slight flush with
+which she received him, as though she carried about with her a secret
+which she expected every one to read, the extinction of that air of
+listlessness which had robbed her for some time of a certain share of her
+good looks--of all these things Borrowdean made quick note. His face grew
+graver as he accepted her not very enthusiastic invitation and occupied
+the back seat of the carriage. For the first time he admitted to himself
+the possibility of failure in his carefully laid plans. He recognized the
+fact, that there were forces at work against which he had no weapon
+ready. He had believed that Berenice was attracted by Mannering's
+personality and genius. He had never seriously considered the question of
+her feelings becoming more deeply involved. So many men had paid vain
+court to her. She had a wonderful reputation for inaccessibility. And yet
+he remembered her manner when he had paid his first unexpected visit to
+Blakely. It should have been a lesson to him. How far had the mischief
+gone, he wondered!
+
+"So Mannering has gone North," he remarked, noticing that she avoided the
+subject.
+
+She nodded. Her parasol drooped a little his way, and he wondered whether
+it was because she desired her face hidden.
+
+"You saw him?"
+
+"Yes," she answered. "He explained how he felt to me."
+
+"And you could not dissuade him?"
+
+"I did not try," she answered, simply. "Lawrence Mannering is not a man
+of ordinary disposition, you know. He had come to the conclusion that it
+was right for him to go, and opposition would only have made him the more
+determined. I cannot see that there is any harm likely to come of it."
+
+"I am not so sure of that," Borrowdean answered, seriously. "Mannering is
+_au fond_ a man of sentiment. There is no clearer thinker or speaker when
+his judgment is unbiassed, but on the other hand, the man's nature is
+sensitive and complex. He has a sort of maudlin self-consciousness which
+is as dangerous a thing as the nonconformist conscience. Heaven knows
+into whose hands he may fall up there."
+
+"He is going incognito," she remarked.
+
+"He is not the sort of man to escape notice," Borrowdean answered. "He
+will be discovered for certain. Of course, if it comes off all right, the
+whole thing will be a feather in his cap. But when I think how much we
+are dependent upon him, I don't like the risk."
+
+"You are sure," she remarked, thoughtfully, "that you do not over-rate--"
+
+"Mannering himself, perhaps," Borrowdean interrupted. "There is no man
+whose personal place cannot be filled. But one thing is very certain.
+Mannering is the only man who unites both sides of our scattered party,
+the only man under whom Fergusson and Johns would both serve. You know
+quite well the curse which has rested upon us. We have become a party of
+units, and our whole effectiveness is destroyed. We want welding into one
+entity. A single session, a single year of office, and the thing would be
+done. We who do the mechanical work would see that there was no breaking
+away again. But we must have that year, we must have Mannering. That is
+why I watch him like a child, and I must say that he has given me a good
+deal of anxiety lately."
+
+"In what way?" she asked.
+
+Borrowdean hesitated. He seemed uncertain how to answer.
+
+"If I explain what I mean," he said, "you will understand that I do not
+speak to you as a woman and an acquaintance of Mannering's, but simply as
+one of ourselves. Mannering's private life is, of course, interesting to
+me only as an index to his political destiny, and my acquaintance with it
+arises solely from my political interest in him. There are things in
+connection with it which I feel that I shall never properly be able to
+understand."
+
+She looked at him steadily. Her cheeks were a little whiter, but her tone
+was deliberate.
+
+"I do not wish to hear anything about Mr. Mannering's private life," she
+said. "You will understand that I am not free or disposed to listen when
+I tell you that I am going to marry him."
+
+This was perhaps the worst blow Borrowdean had ever experienced in the
+course of his whole life. The possibility of this was a danger which he
+had recognized might some time have to be reckoned with, but for the
+present he had felt safe enough. He was taken so completely aback that
+for a few moments his mind was a blank. He remained silent.
+
+"You do not offer me the conventional wishes," she remarked, presently.
+
+"They go--from me to you--as a matter of course," he answered. "To tell
+you the truth, I never thought of Mannering, for many reasons, as a
+marrying man."
+
+"You will have to readjust your views of him," she said, quietly, "for
+I think that we shall be married very soon."
+
+Borrowdean was a little white, and his teeth had come together. Whatever
+happened, he told himself, fiercely, this must never be. He felt his
+breast-pocket mechanically. Yes, the letter was there. Dare he risk it?
+She was a proud woman, she would be unforgiving if once she believed. But
+supposing she found him out? He temporized.
+
+"Thank you for telling me," he said. "Do you mind putting me down here?"
+
+"Why? You seemed in no hurry a few minutes ago."
+
+"The world," he said, "was a different place then."
+
+She looked at him searchingly.
+
+"You had better tell me all about it," she remarked. "You have something
+on your mind, something which you are half disposed to tell me, a little
+more than half, I think. Go on."
+
+He looked at her as one might look at the magician who has achieved the
+apparently impossible.
+
+"You are wonderful," he said. "Yes, I will tell you my dilemma, if you
+like. I have just come from Sloane Gardens!"
+
+Her face changed instantly. It was as though a mask had been dropped over
+it. Her eyes were fixed, her features expressionless.
+
+"Well?" she said, simply.
+
+He drew a letter from his pocket.
+
+"You may as well see it yourself," he remarked. "For reasons which you
+may doubtless understand, I have always kept on good terms with Mrs.
+Phillimore, and she was to have dined with me and some other friends
+to-morrow night. Here is a note which I had from her yesterday. Will you
+read it?"
+
+Berenice held it between her finger tips. There were only a few lines,
+and she read them at a glance.
+
+ Sloane Gardens,
+ _Tuesday_.
+
+ My dear Sir Leslie,
+
+ I am so sorry, but I must scratch for to-morrow night. L. is going
+ North on some mysterious expedition, and I am afraid that he will want
+ me to go with him. In fact, he has already said so. Ask me again some
+ time, won't you?
+
+ Yours ever,
+ Blanche Phillimore.
+
+Berenice folded up the letter and returned it.
+
+"It is a little extraordinary," she remarked. "I am much obliged to you
+for showing me this. If you do not mind, we will talk of something else.
+Look, there is Clara Mannering alone under the trees. Go and talk to
+her."
+
+Berenice touched the checkstring, and Borrowdean was forced to depart.
+She smiled upon him graciously enough, but she spoke not another word
+about Mannering. Borrowdean was obliged to leave her without knowing
+whether he had lost or gained the trick.
+
+Clara Mannering received him not altogether graciously. As a matter of
+fact, she was looking for some one else. They strolled along, talking
+almost in monosyllables. Borrowdean found time to notice the change which
+even these few months in London had wrought in her. She was still
+graceful in her movements, but a smart dressmaker had contrived to make
+her a perfect reproduction of the recognized type of the moment. She had
+lost her delicate colouring. There was a certain hardness in her young
+face, a certain pallor and listlessness in her movements which Borrowdean
+did not fail to note. He tried to lead the conversation into more
+personal channels.
+
+"We seem to have met very little during the last month," he said. "I have
+scarcely had an opportunity to ask you whether you find the life here as
+pleasant as you hoped, whether it has realized your expectations."
+
+"Does anything ever do that?" she asked, a little flippantly. "It is
+different, of course. I do not think that I should be willing to go back
+to Blakely, at any rate."
+
+"You have made a great many friends," he remarked. "I hear of you
+continually."
+
+"A host of acquaintances," she remarked. "I do not think that I have
+materially increased the circle of my friends. I hear of you too, Sir
+Leslie, very often. It seems that people give you a good deal of credit
+for inducing my uncle to come back into politics."
+
+"I certainly did my best to persuade him," Sir Leslie answered, smoothly.
+"If I had known how much anxiety he was going to cause us I might perhaps
+have been a little less keen."
+
+"Anxiety!" she repeated.
+
+"Yes! Do you know where he is now?"
+
+"I have no idea," Clara answered. "All that I do know is that he has gone
+away for three weeks, and that I am going to stay with the Duchess till
+he comes back. It is very nice of her, and all that, of course, but I
+feel rather as though I were going into prison. The Duchess isn't exactly
+the modern sort of chaperon."
+
+Borrowdean nodded sympathetically.
+
+"And consider my anxiety," he remarked. "Your uncle has gone North to
+consider the true position of the labouring classes. Now Mr. Mannering is
+a brilliant politician and a sound thinker, but he is also a man of
+sentiment. They will drug him with it up there. He will probably come
+back with half a dozen new schemes, and we don't want them, you know. He
+ought to be speaking at Glasgow and Leeds this week. He simply ignores
+his responsibilities. He yields to a sudden whim and leaves us _plantes
+la_."
+
+She seemed scarcely to have heard the conclusion of his sentence. Her
+attention was fixed upon a group of men who were talking near.
+
+"Do you know--isn't that Major Bristow?" she asked Borrowdean, abruptly.
+
+Borrowdean put up his glass.
+
+"Looks like him," he admitted.
+
+"I should be so much obliged," she said, "if you would tell him that
+I wish to see him. I have a message for his sister," she concluded,
+a little lamely.
+
+Borrowdean did as he was asked. He noticed the slight impatience of the
+man as he delivered his message, and the flush with which she greeted
+him. Then, with a little shrug of the shoulders, he pursued his way.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII
+
+A PAGE FROM THE PAST
+
+
+She swept into the room, humming a light opera tune, bringing with her
+the usual flood of perfumes, suggestion of cosmetics, a vivid apparition
+of the artificial. Her skirts rustled aggressively, her voice was just
+one degree too loud. Mannering rose to his feet a little wearily.
+
+She looked at him with raised eyebrows.
+
+"Heavens!" she exclaimed. "What have you been doing with yourself,
+Lawrence? You look like a ghost!"
+
+"I am quite well," he answered, calmly.
+
+"Then you don't look it," she answered, bluntly. "Where have you been for
+the last few weeks?"
+
+"Up in the North," he answered. "It was very hot, and I had a great deal
+to do. I suppose I am suffering, like the rest of us, from a little
+overwork."
+
+She spread herself out in a chair opposite to him.
+
+"Don't stand," she said; "you fidget me. I have something to say to you."
+
+"So I gathered from your note," he remarked.
+
+"You haven't hurried."
+
+"I only got back to London last night," he answered. "I could scarcely
+come sooner, could I?"
+
+"I suppose not," she admitted.
+
+Then for a moment or two she was silent. She was watching him a little
+curiously.
+
+"Is this true?" she asked, "this rumour?"
+
+"Won't you be a little more explicit?" he begged.
+
+"They say that you are going to marry the Duchess of Lenchester!"
+
+"It is true," he answered.
+
+She leaned forward. Her clasped hands rested upon her knee. She seemed to
+be examining the tip of her patent shoe. Suddenly she looked up at him.
+
+"You ought to have come and told me yourself!" she said.
+
+"I had no opportunity," he reminded her. "I left London the morning
+after--it happened--and I returned last night."
+
+"Political business?" she asked.
+
+"Entirely."
+
+"Lawrence," she said, "I don't like it."
+
+"Why not?" he asked. "Has mine been such a successful life, do you think,
+that you need grudge me a little happiness towards its close?"
+
+"Bosh!" she answered. "You are only forty-six. You are a young man
+still."
+
+"I had forgotten my years," he declared. "I only know that I am tired."
+
+"You look it," she remarked. "I must say that there is very little of the
+triumphant suitor about you. You work too hard, Lawrence."
+
+"If I do," he asked, with a note of fierceness in his tone, "whose fault
+is it? I was almost happy at Blakely. I had almost learned to forget. It
+was you who dragged me out again. You were not satisfied with half of my
+income; you were always in debt, always wanting more money. Then
+Borrowdean made use of you. He wanted me back into politics, you wanted
+more money for your follies and extravagances. Back I had to come into
+harness. Blanche, I've tried to do my duty to you, but there is a limit.
+I owed you a comfortable place in life, and I have tried to see that you
+have it. I have never refused anything you have asked me, I have never
+mentioned the sacrifices which I have been forced to make. But there is
+a limit. I draw it here. I will not suffer any interference between the
+Duchess of Lenchester and myself!"
+
+Blanche Phillimore rose slowly to her feet. He was used to her fits of
+passion, but there was no sign of anything of the sort in her face. She
+was agitated, but in some new way. Her words were an attack, but her
+manner suggested rather an appeal. Her large, fine eyes, her one
+perfectly natural feature, were soft and luminous. They seemed somehow to
+transfigure her face. To him it seemed like the foolish, handsome woman
+of fifteen years ago who had suddenly come to life again.
+
+"You owed me--a comfortable place in life, Lawrence! Thank--you. You have
+paid the debt very well. You owed me--a respectable guardianship; you
+paid that, too. Thank you again. Now tell me, do you owe me nothing
+else?"
+
+"I owed you one debt," he said, gravely, "which neither I nor any other
+man who incurs it can ever discharge."
+
+"I am glad you realize it," she answered. "But have you ever tried to
+discharge it? You have given me a home and money to throw away on any
+folly which could kill thought. What about the rest?"
+
+"Blanche," he said, gravely, "the rest was impossible! You know that as
+well as I do."
+
+"It is fifteen years ago, Lawrence," she said, "and all that time we have
+fenced with our words. Now I am going to speak a little more plainly. You
+robbed me of my husband. The fault may not have been wholly yours, but
+the fact remains. You struck him, and he died. I was left alone!"
+
+Mannering's face was ashen. The whole horrible scene was rising up again
+before him. He covered his face with his hands. It was more distinct than
+ever. He saw the man's flushed face, heard his stream of abuse, felt the
+sting of his blow, the hot anger with which he had struck back. Then
+those few awful moments of suspense, the moment afterwards when they had
+looked at one another. He shivered! Why had she let loose this flood of
+memories? She was speaking to him again.
+
+"I was left alone," she repeated, quietly, "and I have been alone ever
+since. You don't know much about women, Lawrence. You never did! Try and
+realize, though, what that must mean to a woman like myself, not strong,
+not clever, with very few resources--just a woman. I cared for my
+husband, I suppose, in an average sort of way. At any rate he loved me.
+Then--there was you. Oh, you never made love to me, of course. You were
+not the sort of man to make love to another man's wife. But you used to
+show that you liked to be with me, Lawrence. Your voice and your eyes and
+your whole manner used to tell me that. Then there came--that hideous
+day! I lost you both. What have I had since, Lawrence?"
+
+"Very little, I am afraid, worth having."
+
+"'Very little--worth having'!" She flung the words from her with
+passionate scorn. "I had your alms, your cold, hurried visits, when you
+seemed to shiver if our fingers touched. It would have seemed to you, I
+suppose, a terrible sin to have touched the lips of the woman whom you
+had helped to rob of her husband, to have spoken kindly to her, to have
+given her at least a little affection to warm her heart. Poor me! What a
+hell you made of my days, with your selfish model life, your panderings
+to conscience. I didn't want much, you know, Lawrence," she said, with a
+sudden choking in her voice. "I would never have robbed you of your peace
+of mind. All I wanted was kindness. And I think, Lawrence, that it was a
+debt, but you never paid it."
+
+Mannering had a moment of self-revelation, a terrible, lurid moment.
+Every word that she had said was true.
+
+"You have never spoken to me like this before," he reminded her,
+desperately. "I never knew that you cared."
+
+"Don't lie!" she answered, calmly. "You turned your head away that you
+might not see. In your heart you knew very well. What else, do you think,
+made me, a very ordinary, nervous sort of woman, get you out of the house
+that day, tell my story, the story that shielded you, without faltering,
+put even the words into your own mouth? It was because I was fool enough
+to care! And oh, my God, how you have tortured me since! You would sit
+there, coldly censorious, and reason with me about my friends, my manner
+of life. I knew what you thought. You didn't hide it very well. Lawrence,
+I wonder I didn't kill you!"
+
+"I wish that you had," he said, bitterly.
+
+She nodded.
+
+"Oh, I know how you are feeling just now," she said. "Truth strikes home,
+you know, and it hurts just a little, doesn't it? In a few days your
+admirable common sense will prevail. You will say to yourself: 'She was
+that sort of woman, she had that sort of disposition, she was bound to
+go to the dogs, anyway!' So you are going to marry the Duchess of
+Lenchester, Lawrence!"
+
+He stood up.
+
+"Blanche," he said, "that was all a mistake. I didn't understand. Let us
+forget that day altogether. Marry me now, and I will try to make up for
+these past years."
+
+She stared at him blankly. The colour in her cheek was like a lurid patch
+under the pallor of her skin. She gave a little gasp, and her hand went
+to her side. Then she laughed hardly, almost offensively.
+
+"What a man of sentiment," she declared. "After fifteen years, too, and
+only just engaged to another woman! No, thank you, my dear Lawrence. I've
+lived my life, such as it has been. I'm not so very old, but I look
+fifty, and I've vices enough to blacken an entire neighbourhood. Fancy,
+if people saw me, and heard that you might have married the Duchess of
+Lenchester. They'd hint at an asylum."
+
+"Never mind about other people," he said. "Give me a chance, Blanche, to
+show that I'm not such an absolute brute."
+
+"Rubbish," she interrupted. "Fifteen years ago I would have married you.
+In fact, I expected to. The reason why I found the courage to shield you
+from any unpleasantness that awful day was because I knew if trouble came
+and there was any scandal you would feel yourself obliged to marry me,
+and I wanted you to marry me--because you wanted to. What an idiot I was!
+Now, please go away, Lawrence. Marry the Duchess, if you like, but don't
+worry me with your re-awakened conscience. I'm going my own way for the
+rest of my few years, and the less I see of you the better I shall be
+pleased. You will forgive me--but I have an engagement--down the river!
+I really must hurry you off."
+
+Her teeth were set close together, the sobs seemed tangled in her throat.
+It seemed to her that all the longing in her life was concentrated in
+that one passionate desire, that he should seize her in his arms now,
+hold her there--tell her that it had all been a mistake, that the ugly
+times were dreams, that after all he had cared--a little! The room swam
+round with her, but she pointed smilingly to the door, which her trim
+parlour-maid was holding open. And Mannering went.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX
+
+THE FALTERING OF MANNERING
+
+
+Mannering left by the afternoon train for Hampshire, where he was to be
+the guest for a few days of the leader of his party. He arrived without
+sending word of his coming, to find the whole of the house party absent
+at a cricket match. The short respite was altogether welcome to him. He
+changed his clothes and wandered off into the gardens. Here an hour or so
+later Berenice's maid found him.
+
+"Her Grace would like to see you, sir, if you would come to her
+sitting-room," the girl said, with a demure smile.
+
+Mannering, with something of an inward groan, followed her. Berenice,
+very slim and stately in her simple white muslin gown, rose from the
+couch as he entered, and held out her hands.
+
+"At last," she murmured. "You provoking man, to stay away so long. And
+what have you been doing with yourself?"
+
+Her sentence concluded with a little note of dismay. Mannering was
+positively haggard in the clear afternoon light. There were lines
+underneath his eyes, and his face had a tense, drawn appearance. He did
+not kiss her, as she had more than half expected. He held her hands for
+a moment, and then sank down upon the couch by her side.
+
+"It was not exactly easy work--up there," he said.
+
+She noticed the repression.
+
+"Tell me all about it," she begged.
+
+His thoughts surged back to those three weeks of tragedy. His personal
+misery became for the moment a shadowy thing. The sorrows of one man,
+what were they to the breaking hearts of millions? He thought of the
+children, and he shuddered.
+
+"It isn't so much to tell," he said. "I have been to a dozen or so of the
+largest towns in the North, and have taken the manufacturers one by one.
+I have taken their wage sheets and compared them with past years. The
+result was always the same. Less money distributed amongst more people.
+Afterwards we went amongst the people themselves--to see how they lived.
+It was like a chapter from the inferno--an epic of loathsome tragedy. I
+have seen the children, Berenice, and God help the next generation."
+
+"You must not forget, Lawrence," she said, "that character is an
+essential factor in poverty. Poverty there must always be, because of
+the idle and shiftless."
+
+"Individual poverty, yes," he answered. "Not wholesale poverty, not
+streets of it, towns of it. I don't talk about starving people, although
+I saw them too. Our vicious charitable system may keep their cry from our
+ears, but my sympathies go out to the man who ought to be earning two
+pounds a week, and who is earning fifteen shillings; the man who used to
+have his bit of garden, and smoke, and Sunday clothes, and a day or so's
+holiday now and then. He was a contented, decent, God-fearing citizen,
+the backbone of the whole nation, and he has been blotted away from the
+face of the earth. They work now passively, like dumb brutes, to resist
+starvation, and human character isn't strong enough for such a strain.
+The public houses thrive, and the pawnshops are full. But the children
+haven't enough to eat. They are growing up lank, white, prematurely aged,
+the spectres to dance us statesmen down into hell."
+
+"You are overwrought, dear," she said, gently. "You have been in the
+hands of a man whose object it was to show you only one side of all
+this."
+
+"I have sought for the truth," Mannering answered, "and I have seen it. I
+have learned more in three weeks than all the Commissions and statistics
+and Board-of-Trade figures have taught me in five years."
+
+"And yet," she said, thoughtfully, "you hesitated about that last Navy
+vote. Don't you see that the imperialism which you are a little disposed
+to shrug your shoulders at is the most logical and complete cure for all
+this? We must extend and maintain our colonies, and people them with our
+surplus population."
+
+He shook his head.
+
+"That is not a policy which would ever appeal to me," he answered. "It
+is like an external operation to remove a malady which is of internal
+origin. Either our social laws or our political systems are at fault
+when our trade leaves us, and our labouring classes are unable to earn
+a fair wage. That is the position we are in to-day."
+
+She rose to her feet, and walked restlessly up and down the room.
+Mannering had the look of a crushed man. She watched him critically.
+Writers in magazines and reviews had often made a study of his character.
+She remembered a brilliant contributor to a recent review, who had dwelt
+upon a certain lack of cohesion in his constitution, an inability to
+relegate sentiment to its proper place in dealing with the great workaday
+problems of the world. Conscientious, but never to be trusted, was the
+last anomalous but luminous criticism. Was this frame of mind of his a
+sign of it, she wondered? His place in politics was fixed and sure. What
+right had he, as a man of principle, with a great following, to run even
+the risk of being led away by false prophets? A certain hardness stole
+into her face as she watched him. She tried to steel herself against the
+sight of his suffering, and though she was not wholly successful, there
+was a distinct change in her tone and attitude towards him as she resumed
+her seat.
+
+"Tell me," she asked, "what this means from a practical point of view?
+How will it effect your plans?"
+
+"I must give up my public meetings," he answered, slowly. "I have written
+to Manningham to tell him that he must get some one else to lead the
+campaign."
+
+Berenice was very pale. So many of these wonderful dreams of hers seemed
+vanishing into thin air.
+
+"This is a terrible blow," she said. "It is the worst thing which
+has happened to us for years. Are you going over to the other side,
+Lawrence?"
+
+He shook his head.
+
+"I can't do that altogether," he said. "The position is simply this: I am
+still, so far as my judgment and research go, opposed to tariff reform.
+On the other hand, I dare not take any leading part in fighting any
+scheme which has the barest chance of bringing better times to the
+working classes. I simply stand apart for the moment on this question."
+
+She laughed a little bitterly.
+
+"There is no other question," she said. "You will never be allowed to
+remain neutral. You appear to me to be in a very singular position. You
+are divided between sentiment and conviction, and you prefer to yield to
+the former. Lawrence, do not be hasty! Think of all that depends upon
+your judgment in this matter. From the very first you have been the
+bitterest and most formidable opponent of this absurd scheme. If you turn
+round you will unsettle public opinion throughout the country. Remember,
+the power of the statesman is almost a sacred charge."
+
+"I am remembering," he murmured, "those children. I am bound to think
+this matter out, Berenice. I am going to meet Graham and Mellors next
+week. I shall not rest until I have made some effort to put my hand upon
+the weak spot. Somewhere there is a rotten place. I want to reach it."
+
+"Do you mean to give up your seat?" she asked.
+
+"Not unless I am asked to," he answered. "I may need to work from there."
+
+She sighed.
+
+"I suppose your mind is quite made up," she said.
+
+"Absolutely," he answered.
+
+Her maid came in just then, and Mannering offered to withdraw. She made
+no effort to detain him, and he went at once in search of his host and
+hostess. He found every one assembled in the hall below. Lord Redford,
+Borrowdean, and the chief whip of his party were talking together in a
+corner, and from their significant look at his approach, he felt sure
+that he himself had been the subject of their conversation. The situation
+was more than a little awkward. Lord Redford stepped forward and welcomed
+him cordially.
+
+"I'm afraid you've been knocking yourself up, Mannering," he said. "I've
+just been proposing to Culthorpe here that we bar politics completely for
+twenty-four hours. We'll leave the dinner table with the ladies, and you
+and I will play golf to-morrow. I've had Taylor down here, and I can
+assure you that my links are worth playing over now. Then on Thursday
+we'll have a conference."
+
+"I was scarcely sure," Mannering said, with a slight smile, "whether
+I should be expected to stay until then. Sir Leslie has told you of my
+telegrams?"
+
+"Yes, yes," Lord Redford said, quickly. "We've postponed the meetings for
+the present. We'll talk that all out later on. You've had some tea, I
+hope? No? Well, Eleanor, you are a nice hostess," he added, turning to
+his wife. "Give Mr. Mannering some tea at once, and feed him up with hot
+cakes. Come into the billiard-room afterwards, Mannering, will you? I've
+got a new table in the winter-garden, and we're going to have a pool
+before dinner."
+
+Berenice came in and laid her hand upon her host's arm.
+
+"You need not worry about Mr. Mannering," she declared. "He is going to
+have tea with me at that little table, and I am going to take him for a
+walk in the park afterwards."
+
+"So long as you feed him well," Lord Redford declared, with a little
+laugh, "and turn up in good time for dinner, you may do what you like. If
+you take my advice, Berenice, you will join our league. We have pledged
+ourselves not to utter a word of shop for twenty-four hours."
+
+"I submit willingly," Berenice answered. "Mr. Mannering and I will find
+something else to talk about."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X
+
+THE END OF A DREAM
+
+
+"You can guess why I brought you here, perhaps," Berenice said, gently,
+as she motioned him to sit down by her side. "This place, more than any
+other I know, certainly more than any other at Bayleigh, seems to me to
+be completely restful. There are the trees, you see, and the water, and
+the swans, that are certainly the laziest creatures I know. You look to
+me as though you needed rest, Lawrence."
+
+"I suppose I do," he answered, slowly. "I am not sure, though, whether
+I deserve it."
+
+"You are rather a self-distrustful mortal," she remarked, leaning back in
+her corner and looking at him from under her parasol. "You have worked
+hard all the session, and now you have finished up by three weeks of,
+I should think, herculean labour. If you do not deserve rest who does?"
+
+"The rest which I deserve," Mannering answered, bitterly, "is the rest of
+those whose bones are bleaching amongst the caves and corals of the sea
+there! That is Matapan Point, isn't it, where the hidden rocks are?"
+
+She nodded.
+
+"Really, you are developing into a very gloomy person," she said.
+"Lawrence, don't let us fence with one another any longer. What you may
+decide to do politically may be ruinous to your career, to your chance of
+usefulness in the world, and to my hopes. But I want you to understand
+this. It can make no difference to me. I have had dreams perhaps of a
+great future, of being the wife of a Prime Minister who would lead his
+country into a new era of prosperity, who would put the last rivets into
+the bonds of a great imperial empire. But one never realizes all one's
+hopes, Lawrence. I love politics. I love being behind the scenes, and
+helping to move the pawns across the board. But I am a woman, too,
+Lawrence, and I love you. Put everything connected with your public life
+on one side. Let me ask you this. You are changed. Has anything come
+between us as man and woman?"
+
+"Yes," he answered, "something has come between us."
+
+She sat quite still for several minutes. She prayed that he too might
+keep silence, and he seemed to know her thoughts. Over the little sheet
+of ornamental water, down the glade of beech and elm trees narrowing
+towards the cliffs, her eyes travelled seawards. It was to her a terrible
+moment. Mannering had represented so much to her, and her standard was a
+high one. If there was a man living whom she would have reckoned above
+the weaknesses of the herd, it was he. In those days at Blakely she had
+almost idealized him. The simple purity of his life there, his delicate
+and carefully chosen pleasures, combined with his almost passionate love
+of the open places of the earth, had led her to regard him as something
+different from any other man whom she had ever known. All Borrowdean's
+hints and open statements had gone for very little. She had listened and
+retained her trust. And now she had a horrible fear. Something had gone
+out of the man, something which went for strength, something without
+which he seemed to lack that splendid militant vitality which had always
+seemed to her so admirable. Perhaps he was going to make a confession,
+one of those crude, clumsy confessions of a stained life, which have
+drawn the colour and the joy from so many beautiful dreams. She shivered
+a little, but she inclined her head to listen.
+
+"Well," she said, "what is it?"
+
+"I have asked another woman to marry me only a few hours ago," he said,
+quietly.
+
+Berenice was a proud woman, and for the moment she felt her love for this
+man a dried-up and shrivelled thing. She was white to the lips, but she
+commanded her voice, and her eyes met his coldly.
+
+"May I inquire into the circumstances--of this--somewhat remarkable
+proceeding?" she inquired.
+
+"There is a woman," he said, "whose life I helped to wreck--not in the
+orthodox way," he added, with a note of scorn in his tone, "but none the
+less effectually. The one recompense I never thought of offering her was
+marriage. I have seen that, despite all my efforts to aid her, her life
+has been a failure. Her friends have been the wrong sort of friends, her
+life the wrong sort of life. What it was that was dragging her downwards
+I never guessed, for she, too, in her way, was a proud woman. To-day she
+sent for me. What passed between us is her secret as much as mine. I can
+only tell you that before I left I had asked her to marry me."
+
+"I think," she said, calmly, "that you need tell me no more."
+
+"There is very little more that I can tell you," he answered. "I
+have no affection for her, and she has refused to marry me. But she
+remains--between us--irrevocably!"
+
+"You are lucidity itself," she replied. "Will you forgive me if I leave
+you? I am scarcely used to this sort of situation, and I should like to
+be alone."
+
+"Go by all means, Berenice," he answered. "You and I are better apart.
+But there is one thing which I must say to you, and you must hear. What
+has passed between you and me is the epitome of the love-making of my
+life. You are the only woman whom I have desired to make my wife. You are
+the only woman whom I have loved, and shall love until I die. I can make
+you no reparation, none is possible! Yet these things are my
+justification."
+
+Berenice had turned away. The passionate ring of truth in his tone
+arrested her footsteps. She paused. Her heart was beating very fast, her
+coldness was all assumed. It was so much happiness to throw away, if
+indeed there was a chance. She turned and faced him, nervous, gaunt,
+hollow-eyed, the wreck of his former self. Pity triumphed in spite of
+herself. What was this leaven of weakness in the man, she wondered, which
+had so suddenly broken him down? He had only to hold on his way and he
+would be Prime Minister in a year. And at the moment of trial he had
+crumpled up like a piece of false metal. A wave of false sentiment, a
+maniacal hyper-conscientiousness, had been sufficient to sap the very
+strength from his bones. And then--there was this other woman. Was she to
+let him go without an effort? He might recover his sanity. It was perhaps
+a mere nervous breakdown, which had made him the prey of strange fancies.
+She spoke to him differently. She spoke once more as the woman who loved
+him.
+
+"Lawrence," she said, "you are telling me too much, and not enough. If
+you want to send me away I must go. But tell me this first. What claim
+has this woman upon you?"
+
+"It is not my secret," he groaned. "I cannot tell you."
+
+"Leslie Borrowdean knows it," she said. "I could have heard it, but I
+refused to listen. Remember, whatever you may owe to other people you owe
+me something, too."
+
+"It is true," he answered. "Well, listen. I killed her husband!"
+
+"You! You--killed her husband!" she repeated vaguely.
+
+"Yes! She shielded me. There was an inquest, and they found that he had
+heart disease. No one knew that I had even seen him that day, no one save
+she and a servant, who is dead. But the truth lives. He had reason to be
+angry with me--over a money affair. He came home furious, and found me
+alone with his wife. He called me--well, it was a lie--and he struck me.
+I threw him on one side--and he fell. When we picked him up he was dead."
+
+"It was terrible!" she said, "but you should have braved it out. They
+could have done very little to you."
+
+"I know it," he answered. "But I was young, and my career was just
+beginning. The thing stunned me. She insisted upon secrecy. It would
+reflect upon her, she thought, if the truth came out, so I acquiesced,
+I left the house unseen. All these days I have had to carry the burden of
+this thing with me. To-day--seemed to be the climax. For the first time I
+understood."
+
+"She can never marry you," Berenice said. "It would be horrible."
+
+"She refused to marry me to-day," he answered, "but she laid her life
+bare, and I cannot marry any one else."
+
+Berenice was trembling. She was no longer ashamed to show her agitation.
+
+"I am very sorry for you, Lawrence," she said. "I am very sorry for
+myself. Good-bye!"
+
+She left him, and Mannering sank back upon the seat.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI
+
+BORROWDEAN SHOWS HIS "HAND"
+
+
+"To be plain with you," Borrowdean remarked, "Mannering's defection would
+be irremediable. He alone unites Redford, myself, and--well, to put it
+crudely, let us say the Imperialistic Liberal Party with Manningham and
+the old-fashioned Whigs who prefer the ruts. There is no other leader
+possible. Redford and I talked till daylight this morning. Now, can
+nothing be done with Mannering?"
+
+"To be plain with you, too, then, Sir Leslie," Berenice answered, "I do
+not think that anything can be done with him. In his present frame of
+mind I should say that he is better left alone. He has worked himself up
+into a thoroughly sentimental and nervous state. For the moment he has
+lost his sense of balance."
+
+Borrowdean nodded.
+
+"Desperate necessity," he said, "sometimes justifies desperate measures.
+We need Mannering, the country and our cause need him. If argument will
+not prevail there is one last alternative left to us. It may not be such
+an alternative as we should choose, but beggars must not be choosers. I
+think that you will know what I mean."
+
+"I have no idea," Berenice answered.
+
+"You are aware," he continued, "that there is in Mannering's past history
+an episode, the publication of which would entail somewhat serious
+consequences to him."
+
+"Well?"
+
+It was a most eloquent monosyllable, but Borrowdean had gone too far to
+retreat.
+
+"I propose that we make use of it," he said. "Mannering's attitude is
+rankly foolish, or I would not suggest such a thing. But I hold that we
+are entitled, under the circumstances, to make use of any means whatever
+to bring him to his senses."
+
+Berenice smiled. They were standing together upon a small hillock in the
+park, watching the golf.
+
+"Charlatanism in politics does not appeal to me," she said, drily. "Any
+party that adopted such means would completely alienate my sympathies.
+No, my dear Sir Leslie, don't stoop to such low-down means. Mannering is
+honest, but infatuated. Win him back by fair means, if you can, but don't
+attempt anything of the sort you are suggesting. I, too, know his
+history, from his own lips. Any one who tried to use it against him,
+would forfeit my friendship!"
+
+"Success then would be bought too dearly," Borrowdean answered, with
+a gallantry which it cost him a good deal to assume. "May I pass on,
+Duchess, in connexion with this matter, to ask you a somewhat more
+personal question?"
+
+"I think," Berenice said, calmly, "that I can spare you the necessity.
+You were going to speak, I believe, of the engagement between Lawrence
+Mannering and myself."
+
+"I was," Borrowdean admitted.
+
+"It does not exist any longer," Berenice said, "I should be glad if you
+would inform any one who has heard the rumour that it is without any
+foundation."
+
+Borrowdean looked thoughtfully at the woman by his side.
+
+"I am very glad to hear it," he declared. "I am glad for many reasons,
+and I am glad personally."
+
+She raised her eyebrows.
+
+"Indeed! I cannot imagine how it should affect you personally."
+
+"I perhaps said more than I meant to," he replied, calmly. "I am a poor,
+struggling politician myself, whose capital consists of brains and a
+capacity for work, and whose hopes are coloured with perhaps too daring
+ambitions. Amongst them--"
+
+"Mr. Mannering has holed out from off the green," she interrupted.
+"Positively immoral, I call it."
+
+"Amongst them," Borrowdean continued, calmly, "is one which some day or
+other I must tell you, for indeed you are concerned in it."
+
+"I can assure you, Sir Leslie," she said, looking at him steadily,
+"that I am not at all a sympathetic person. My strong advice to you would
+be--not to tell me. I do not think that you would gain anything by it."
+
+Borrowdean met his fate with a bow and a shrug of the shoulders.
+
+"It only remains," he said, "for me to beg you to pardon what might seem
+like presumption. Shall we meet them on the last green?"
+
+Mannering would have avoided Berenice, but she gave him no option. She
+laid her hand upon his arm, and volunteered to show him a new way home.
+
+"You must be on your guard, Lawrence," she said. "Lord Redford is very
+fond of concealing his plans to the last moment, but he is a very clever
+man. And Sir Leslie Borrowdean would give his little finger to catch you
+tripping. All this avoidance of politics is part of a scheme. They will
+spring something upon you quite suddenly. Don't give any hasty pledges."
+
+"Thank you for your warning," he said. "I will be careful."
+
+"Tell me," she said, "as a friend, what are your plans? Forget that I am
+interested in politics altogether. I simply want to know how you are
+spending your time for the next few months."
+
+"It depends upon them," he answered, looking downwards into the valley,
+where Lord Redford and Borrowdean were walking side by side. "If they ask
+me to resign my seat I shall go North again, and it is just possible that
+I might come back into the House as a labour member. On the other hand,
+if they are content with such support as I can give them, and to have me
+on the fence at present so far as the tariff question is concerned, why,
+I shall go back and do the best I can for them."
+
+"You are not quite won over to the other side yet, then," she remarked,
+smiling.
+
+"Not yet," he answered. "If ever there was an honest doubter, I am one.
+If I had never left my study, England could not have contained a more
+rabid opponent of any change in our fiscal policy than I. I am like a
+small boy who is absolutely sure that he has worked out his sum
+correctly, but finds the answer is not the one which his examiner
+expects. There is something wrong somewhere. I want, if I can, to
+discover it. I only want the truth! I don't see why it should be so hard
+to find, why figures and common sense should clash entirely and horribly
+with existing facts."
+
+"You wore dun-coloured spectacles when you took your walks abroad," she
+said, smiling. "No one else seems to have discovered so distressing a
+state of affairs as you have spoken of."
+
+"Because they never looked beneath the surface," he answered. "I myself
+might have failed to understand if I had not been shown. Remember that
+our workingman of the better class does not go marching through the
+streets with an unemployed banner and a tin cup when he is in want. He
+takes his half wages and closes the door upon his sufferings. God help
+him!"
+
+"Adieu, politics," she declared, with a shrug of the shoulders. "Isn't
+that Clara playing croquet with Major Bristow? I wish I didn't dislike
+that man so much. I hate to see the child with him."
+
+Mannering sighed.
+
+"Poor Clara!" he said. "I am afraid I have left her a good deal to
+herself lately."
+
+"I am afraid you have," she agreed, a little gravely. "May I give you
+a word of advice?"
+
+"You know that I should be grateful for it," he declared.
+
+"Be sure that she never goes to the Bristows again, and ask her whether
+she has any other card debts. It may be my fancy, but I don't like the
+way that man hangs about her, and looks at her. I am sure that she does
+not like him, and yet she never seems to have the courage to snub him."
+
+"I am very much obliged to you," he said. "I will speak to her to-day."
+
+"I don't know where I am going, or what I shall do for the autumn," she
+continued, with a little sigh, "but if you like to trust Clara with me I
+will look after her. I think that she needs a woman. Yes, I thought so.
+Redford and Sir Leslie are waiting for you. Go and have it out with them,
+my friend."
+
+"You are too kind to me," he said; "kinder than I deserve!"
+
+"Oh, I don't know," she answered. "I am afraid that my kindness is only
+another form of selfishness. I am rather a lonely person, you know. Lord
+Redford is beckoning to you. I am going to break up that croquet party."
+
+Mannering joined the other two men. Berenice strolled on to the lawn.
+Major Bristow eyed her coming with some disfavour. He was one of the men
+whom she always ignored. Clara, on the other hand, seemed proportionately
+relieved.
+
+"I want you to come to my room as soon as you possibly can, child,"
+Berenice said. "Shall I wait while you finish your game?"
+
+"Oh, I will come at once," Clara exclaimed, laying down her mallet.
+"Major Bristow will not mind, I am sure."
+
+Major Bristow looked as though he did mind very much, but lacked the
+nerve to say so. Berenice calmly took Clara by the arm and led her away.
+
+"You are not engaged to Major Bristow by any chance, are you?" she asked,
+calmly.
+
+"Engaged to Major Bristow? Heavens, no!" Clara answered. "I don't think
+he is in the least a marrying man."
+
+"So much the better for our sex," Berenice answered. "I wouldn't spend so
+much time with him, my dear, if I were you. I have known people with
+nicer reputations."
+
+Clara turned a shade paler.
+
+"I can never get away from him," she said. "He follows me--everywhere,
+and--"
+
+"You do not by any chance, I suppose, owe him money?" Berenice asked.
+"They tell me that he has a somewhat objectionable habit of winning money
+from girls, more than they can afford to pay, and then suggesting that it
+stand over for a time."
+
+Clara turned towards her with terrified eyes.
+
+"I--I do owe Major Bristow a little still," she admitted. "I seem to have
+been so unlucky. He told me that any time would do, that I should win it
+back again, and I had no idea what stakes we were playing. I don't touch
+a card now at all, but this was at Ellingham House. They insisted on my
+making a fourth at bridge."
+
+Berenice tightened her grasp upon the girl's arm.
+
+"Don't say anything about this to your uncle just now," she insisted. "I
+am going to take you up to my room and write you a cheque for the amount,
+whatever it may be. Afterwards I will have a talk with Major Bristow.
+Nonsense, child, don't cry! The money is nothing to me, and I always
+promised your uncle that I would look after you a little."
+
+"I have been such a fool!" the girl sobbed.
+
+Berenice for a moment was also sad. Her lips quivered, her eyes were
+wistful.
+
+"We all think that sometimes, child," she said, quietly. "We all have our
+foolish moments and our hours of repentance, even the wisest of us!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII
+
+SIR LESLIE BORROWDEAN INCURS A HEAVY DEBT
+
+
+"I suppose," Lord Redford remarked, thoughtfully, "politics represents a
+different thing to all of us, according to our temperament. To me, I must
+confess, it is a plain, practical business, the business of law-making.
+To you, Mannering, I fancy that it appeals a little differently. Now, let
+us understand one another. Are you prepared to undertake this campaign
+which we planned out a few months ago?"
+
+"If I did undertake it," Mannering said, "it would be to leave unsaid the
+things which you would naturally expect from me, and to say things of
+which you could not possibly approve. I am very sorry. You can command my
+resignation at any moment, if you will. But my views, though in the main
+they have not changed, are very much modified."
+
+Lord Redford nodded.
+
+"That," he said, "is our misfortune, but it certainly is not your
+fault. As for your resignation, if you crossed the floor of the House
+to-morrow we should not require it of you. You are responsible to your
+constituents only. We dragged you back into public life--you see I admit
+it freely--and we are willing to take our risk. Whether you are with us
+or against us, we recognize you as one of those whose place is amongst
+the rulers of the people."
+
+"You are very generous, Lord Redford," Mannering answered.
+
+"Not at all. It is no use being peevish. You are a great disappointment
+to us, but we have not given up hope. If you are not altogether with us
+to-day, there is to-morrow. I tell you frankly, Mannering, that I look
+upon you as a man temporarily led astray by a wave of sentimentality. So
+long as the world lasts there will be rich men and poor, but you must
+always remember in considering this that it is character as well as
+circumstances which is at the root of the acquisition of wealth.
+Generations have gone to the formation of our social fabric. It is the
+slow evolution of the human laws of necessity. The socialist and the
+sentimentalist and the philanthropist, dropping gold through his fingers,
+have each had their fling at it, but their cry is like the cry from the
+wilderness--a long, lone thing! And then to come to the real point,
+Mannering. Grant for a moment all that you have told Borrowdean and
+myself about the condition of the labour classes in the great towns and
+the universal depression of trade. How can you possibly imagine that the
+imposition of tariff duties is the sovereign, or even a possible, remedy?
+Why, you yourself have been one of the most brilliant pamphleteers
+against anything of the sort. You have been called the Cobden of the day.
+You cannot throw principles away like an old garment."
+
+"Let us leave for one moment," Mannering answered, "the personal side of
+the matter. I have seen in the majority of our large cities terrible and
+convincing proof of the decline of our manufacturing industries. I have
+seen the outcome of this in hundreds of ruined homes, in a whole
+generation coming into the world half starved, half clothed--God help
+those children. I have always maintained that the labouring classes
+should be the happiest race of people in this country. I find them
+without leisure or recreation, fighting fate with both hands for food.
+Redford, the whole world has never shown us a greater tragedy than the
+one which we others deliberately and persistently close our eyes to--I
+mean the struggle for life which is being waged in every one of our great
+cities."
+
+"We have statistics," Borrowdean began.
+
+"Damn statistics!" Mannering interrupted. "I have juggled with figures
+myself in the old days, and I know how easy it is. So do you, and so does
+Redford. This is what I want to put to you. The tragedy is there. Perhaps
+those who have faced it and come back again to tell of their experiences
+have been a little hysterical--the horror of it has carried them away.
+They may not have adopted the most effectual means of making the world
+understand, but it is there. I have seen it. A thousandth part of this
+misery in a country with which we had nothing to do, and no business to
+interfere, and we should be having mass meetings at Exeter Hall, and
+making general asses of ourselves all over the country, shrieking for
+intervention, wasting a whole dictionary of rhetoric, and probably
+getting well snubbed for our pains. And because the murders are by slow
+poison instead of with steel, because they are in our own cities and
+amongst our own people, we accept them with a sort of placid
+satisfaction. You, Lord Redford, speak of character and enunciate social
+laws, and Borrowdean will argue that after all the trade of the country
+is not so bad as it might be, and will make an epigram on the importation
+of sentimentality into politics. In plain words, Lord Redford, we, as a
+party, are asleep to what is going on. One statesman has recognized it,
+and proposed a startling and drastic remedy. We attack the remedy tooth
+and nail, but we place forward no counter proposition. It is as though a
+dying man were attended by two doctors, one of whom has prepared a remedy
+which the other declines to administer without suggesting one of his own.
+It is not a logical position. The medicine may not cure, but let the man
+have his chance of life."
+
+"Your simile," Lord Redford said, "assumes that the man is dying."
+
+"I have seen the mark of death upon his face," Mannering answered. "The
+men who are traitors to their country to-day are those who, healthy
+enough themselves, talk causeless and shallow optimism which is fed alone
+by their own prosperity. The doctrine of Christ is the care of others.
+If you do not believe, the sick-room is open also to you; go there
+unprejudiced, and with an open mind, and you will come away as I have
+come away."
+
+"Must we take it, then, Mannering," Lord Redford said, gravely, "that you
+are prepared to support the administering of the medicine you spoke of?"
+
+Mannering was silent for a moment.
+
+"At least," he said, "I am not going to be amongst those who cry out
+against it and offer nothing themselves. I am going to analyze that
+medicine, and if I see a chance of life in it I shall say, let us run
+a little risk, rather than stand by inactive, to look upon the face of
+death. In other words, I become for the moment a passive figure in
+politics so far as this question is concerned."
+
+Lord Redford held out his hand.
+
+"Let it go at that, Mannering," he said. "I believe that you will come
+back to us. We shall be always glad of your support, but of course you
+will understand that the position from to-day is changed. If you had
+carried the standard, as we had hoped, the reward also was to have been
+yours. We must elect one of ourselves to take your place. To put it
+plainly, your defection now releases us from all pledges."
+
+"I understand," Mannering answered. "It was scarcely ambition which
+brought me back into politics, and I must work for the cause in which I
+believe. If I am forced to take any definite action, I shall, of course,
+resign my seat."
+
+The door closed behind him. Borrowdean struck a match, and Lord Redford
+looked thoughtfully out of the window across the park.
+
+"I was always afraid of this," Borrowdean said, gloomily. "There is a
+leaven of madness in the man."
+
+Lord Redford shrugged his shoulders.
+
+"Genius or madness," he remarked. "We may yet see him a modern Rienzi
+carried into power on the shoulders of the people. Such a man might
+become anything. As a matter of fact, I think that he will go back into
+his study. He has the brain to fashion wonderful thoughts, and the lips
+to fire them into life. But I doubt his adaptability. I cannot imagine
+him ever becoming a real and effective force."
+
+Borrowdean, who was bitterly disappointed, smoked furiously.
+
+"We shall see," he said. "If Mannering is not for us, I think that I can
+at least promise that he does no harm on the other side."
+
+Lord Redford turned away from the window. He eyed Borrowdean curiously.
+
+"It was you," he remarked, "who brought Mannering back into public life.
+You had a certain reward for it, and you would have had a much greater
+one if things had gone our way. But I want you to remember this.
+Mannering is best left alone--now, for the present. You understand me?"
+
+Borrowdean shrugged his shoulders. There was a good deal too much
+sentiment in politics.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Mannering and Berenice came together for a few moments on the terrace
+after dinner. He was not so completely engrossed in his own affairs as
+to fail to notice her lack of colour and a certain weariness of manner,
+which had kept her more silent than usual during the whole evening.
+
+"Well?" she said.
+
+"There is nothing definite," he answered. "You see, the question of
+tariff reform is not before the House at present, and Redford does not
+require me to resign my seat. But of course it will come to that sooner
+or later."
+
+She leaned over the grey balustrade. With her it was a moment of
+weakness. She was suddenly conscious of the fact that she was no longer
+a young woman. The time when she might hope to find in life the actual
+flavour and joy of passionate living was nearing the end. And a little
+while ago they had seemed so near! The pity of it stirred up a certain
+sense of rebellion in her heart. She was still a beautiful woman. She
+knew very well the arts by which men are enslaved. Why should she not try
+them upon him--this man who loved her, who seemed willing to sacrifice
+both their lives to a piece of senseless quixoticism? Her fingers touched
+his, and held them softly. Thrilled through all his senses, he turned
+towards her wonderingly.
+
+"Are we wise, Lawrence," she whispered, "if indeed you love me? Life is
+so short, and I am not a young woman any more. I have been lonely so
+long. I want a little happiness before I go."
+
+"Don't!" he cried, hoarsely. "You know--what comes between us."
+
+She was a little indignant, but still tender.
+
+"This woman does not want you, Lawrence," she cried. "I do! Oh,
+Lawrence!"
+
+He faltered. She laid her fingers upon his arm.
+
+"Come down the steps," she murmured, "and I will show you Lady Redford's
+rose-garden."
+
+Her touch was compelling. He could not have resisted it. And about his
+heart lay the joy of her near presence. Side by side they moved along the
+terrace--it seemed to him that they passed towards their destiny. The
+gentle rustling of her clothes, their slight, mysterious perfume, was
+like music to him. A sudden wave of passion carried him away. The
+primitive virility of the man, awake at last, demanded its birthright.
+
+And then upon the lower step they met Borrowdean, and he placed himself
+squarely in their way.
+
+"I am sorry to interrupt you," he said, gravely, "but Lord Redford has
+sent me out to look for you and to send you at once into the library.
+Something rather serious has happened."
+
+Mannering came down to earth.
+
+"The evening papers have come," Borrowdean said. "The _Pall Mall_ has the
+whole story. You were seen at the working-men's club in Glasgow!"
+
+Mannering turned towards the house. His nerves were all tingling with
+excitement, but the thread had suddenly been snapped. He was no longer in
+danger of yielding to that flood of delicious sensations. His voice had
+been almost steady as he had begged Berenice to excuse him. Berenice
+stood quite still. Her hand was pressed to her side, her dark eyes were
+lit with passion. She leaned forward towards Borrowdean, and seemed about
+to strike him.
+
+"You will find yourself--repaid for this, Sir Leslie," she murmured.
+
+Then she turned abruptly away. For an hour or more she walked alone
+amongst the trellised walks of Lady Redford's rose-garden. But Mannering
+did not return.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII
+
+THE WOMAN AND--THE OTHER WOMAN
+
+
+"You see, Mannering," Lord Redford said, tapping the outspread evening
+paper with his forefinger, "the situation now presents a different
+aspect. I have no wish to force your hand--a few hours ago I think I
+proved this. But if you are to remain even nominally with us some sort
+of pronouncement must come from you in reply to these statements."
+
+"Yes," Mannering said, "that is quite reasonable."
+
+"The postponement of your campaign has been hinted at before," Lord
+Redford continued, "but we have never used the word abandonment. Now, to
+speak bluntly, the whole fat is in the fire. Your place on the fence is
+no longer possible. You must make your own declaration, and it must be
+for one of three things. You must remain with us, abandon public life for
+a time, or go over to the other side. And you must make promptly an
+announcement of your intentions."
+
+"I have no alternative in the matter," Mannering said. "In fact, I think
+that this has happened opportunely. My presence with you was sure to
+prove something of an embarrassment to all of us. I shall apply for the
+Chiltern Hundreds to-morrow, and I shall not seek to re-enter the present
+Parliament. The few months' respite will be useful to me. I can only
+express to you, Lord Redford, my sincere gratitude for all your
+consideration, and my regret for this disarrangement of your plans."
+
+Lord Redford sighed. Why were men born, he wondered, with such a
+prodigious capacity for playing the fool?
+
+"My chief regret, Mannering," he said, "is for you. The Fates so
+controlled circumstances that you seemed certain to achieve as a young
+man what is the crowning triumph of us veterans in the political world. I
+respect the honest scruples of every man, but it seems to me that you are
+throwing away an unparalleled opportunity in a fit of what a practical
+man like myself can only call sentimentality. I have no more to say.
+Forgive me if I have said too much. For the rest, give us the pleasure of
+your company here for as long as you find it convenient. We will abjure
+politics, and you shall give me my revenge at golf."
+
+Mannering shook his head.
+
+"I am very much obliged to you," he said, "but there is only one course
+open to me. I must go back and make my plans. If I could have a carriage
+for the nine-forty!"
+
+Lord Redford made no effort to induce him to change his mind, though he
+remained courteous to the last.
+
+"I was really glad to have him go," he told Borrowdean afterwards. "His
+very presence--the thought that there could be such colossal fools in the
+world--irritated me beyond measure. You can write his epitaph, Leslie, if
+your humorous vein is working, for the man is politically dead."
+
+"One never knows," Berenice said, quietly. "There must be something great
+about a man capable of such prodigious self-sacrifice. For at heart
+Lawrence Mannering is an ambitious man."
+
+Lord Redford shrugged his shoulders.
+
+"Perhaps," he said, "but I am very sure of this. There is nothing so
+great about the man as his folly."
+
+Berenice smiled.
+
+"We shall see," she said. "Personally, I believe that Sir Leslie would
+find his epitaph a little previous. I saw a great deal of Lawrence
+Mannering in the country, and I think that I understand him as well as
+either of you. I believe that his day will come."
+
+"Well, all I can say is," Lord Redford pronounced, "that I very much
+wish you had left him down at his country home. Between you you have
+created a very serious situation. I must go up to town to-morrow and see
+Manningham. In the meantime, Leslie, I shall leave those reports severely
+alone. We must ignore Mannering altogether."
+
+Berenice turned away with a smile at her lips. She had a very little
+opinion of Lord Redford and his following. Already she saw the man whose
+career they counted finished, at the head of a new and greater party.
+There were plenty of clever men of the coming generation, plenty of room
+for compromises, for the formation of a great national party out of the
+scattered units of a disunited opposition. She believed Mannering strong
+enough to do this. She saw in it greater possibilities than might have
+been forthcoming even if he had been chosen to lead the somewhat ragged
+party represented by Lord Redford and his followers. For the rest, she
+had been very near the success she so desired. Only an accident had
+robbed her of victory. If once they had reached the rose-garden she knew
+that she would have triumphed.
+
+As her maid took off her jewellery that night she smiled at herself in
+the glass. She was thinking of that moment on the terrace. The glow had
+not wholly faded from her face--she saw herself with her long, slender
+neck and smooth, unwrinkled complexion, still beautiful, still a woman to
+be loved. Her maid ventured to whisper a word of respectful compliment.
+Truly Madame La Duchesse was growing younger!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+What strange whim, or evil fate, had turned his feet in that direction?
+Mannering often tried to trace backwards the workings of his mind that
+night, but he never wholly succeeded. He reached London about eleven, and
+sent his man home with his luggage, intending merely to call in at the
+club for letters. But afterwards he remembered only that he had strolled
+aimlessly along homewards, thinking deeply, and not particularly careful
+as to his direction. Even then he would have passed the house in Sloane
+Gardens without looking up, but for the civil "Good-night, sir," of a
+coachman sitting on the box of a small brougham drawn up against the
+kerb. He raised his head to return the salute, and realized at once where
+he was. Almost at the same moment the front door opened, and behind a
+glow of light in the hall he saw a familiar figure in the act of passing
+out to her carriage. The street was well lit, and he was almost opposite
+a lamp-post. She recognized him at once.
+
+"Lawrence," she exclaimed, incredulously. "You--were you coming in?"
+
+She was wrapped from head to foot in a long white opera cloak, but the
+jewels in her hair and at her throat glistened in the flashing light. She
+moved slowly forward to his side. Her maid, who had been coming out to
+open the carriage door, lingered behind.
+
+"I--upon my word, I scarcely know how I came here," he answered, a little
+bewildered. "I was walking home--it is scarcely out of my way--and
+thinking. You are going out?"
+
+She nodded. Looking at her now more closely he saw the shadows under
+her eyes, only imperfectly concealed. The little gesture with which she
+answered him savoured of weariness.
+
+"Yes, I was going out. I have sat alone with my thoughts all day, and I
+don't want to end my life in a lunatic asylum. I want a little change,
+that is all. If you will come in and talk to me instead, that will do as
+well. Any sort of distraction, you see," she added, with a hard little
+laugh, "just to keep me from--"
+
+She did not finish her sentence. He looked at her gravely, and from her
+to the waiting carriage. He suddenly realized how the altered condition
+of affairs must affect her.
+
+"I shall have to come and see you in a day or two," he said. "But
+now--" he hesitated.
+
+"Why not now, then?" she asked.
+
+"You have an engagement," he said.
+
+She shook her head.
+
+"I was only going somewhere to supper. I was going to call for Eva
+Fanesborough, and I suppose we should have had some bridge afterwards.
+Come in instead, Lawrence. I can telephone to her."
+
+Already a presage of evil seemed to be forming itself in his mind. He
+would have given anything to have thought of some valid excuse.
+
+"Your carriage--"
+
+"Pooh!" she answered. "John, I shall not want you to-night," she said to
+the coachman. "Come!"
+
+She led the way, and Mannering followed. As the maid closed the door
+behind them Mannering felt his breath quicken--his sense of depression
+grew stronger. He seemed threatened by some new and intangible danger. He
+stood on the hearthrug while she bent over the switch and turned on the
+electric light in the sitting-room. Then she threw off her cloak and
+looked at him curiously for a moment. Her face softened.
+
+"My dear Lawrence," she said, "has politics done this, or are you ill?"
+
+"I am quite well," he answered. "A little tired, perhaps. I have had
+rather a trying day."
+
+She rang the bell, and ordered sandwiches and wine.
+
+"You look like a corpse," she said, and stood over him while he ate and
+drank. And all the time that indefinable fear within him grew. She made
+him smoke. Then she leaned back in an easy-chair and looked across at
+him.
+
+"You had something to say to me. What was it?"
+
+"Nothing good," he answered. "I have quarrelled with my party, and I have
+to resign my seat in the House."
+
+"Already?"
+
+"Already! I am sorry, as of course in a few months' time I should have
+been in office, and drawing a considerable salary. As it is--" he
+hesitated.
+
+"Oh, I understand!" she said. "Well, it doesn't matter much. I only have
+the house for six months furnished, and that's paid for in advance. John
+must go, and the horses can be sold."
+
+He looked at her in amazement. Only a few months ago she had talked very
+differently.
+
+"I--I am not sure whether all that will be necessary," he said. "I can
+find a tenant for Blakely, and I daresay I can manage another hundred a
+year or so. Only, of course, the large increase we had thought of will
+not be possible now."
+
+"No, I suppose not," she answered, idly.
+
+He moved in his chair uncomfortably. He found her wholly
+incomprehensible.
+
+"What a beast I must have seemed to you always," she exclaimed, suddenly.
+
+"Why?" he asked, pointlessly.
+
+"I've sponged on you all my life, and you're not a rich man, are you,
+Lawrence? Then I dragged you into politics to supply me with the means to
+spend more money. My claim on you was one of sentiment only, but--I've
+made you pay. No wonder you hate me!"
+
+"Your claim on me, even to every penny I possess," Mannering answered,
+"was a perfectly just one. I have never denied it, and I have done my
+best. And as to hating you, you know quite well it is not true!"
+
+"Ah!" She rose suddenly to her feet, and before he had realized her
+intention she was on her knees by his side. She caught at his hand and
+kept her face hidden from him.
+
+"Lawrence," she cried, "I was mad the other day. It was all the pent-up
+bitterness of years which seemed to escape me so suddenly. I said so much
+that I did not mean to--I was mad, dear. Oh, Lawrence, I am so lonely!"
+
+Then the fear in his heart became a live thing. He was dumb. He could not
+have spoken had he tried.
+
+"It was your coldness all these years," she murmured. "You were different
+once. You know that. At first, when the horror of what happened was
+young, I thought I understood. I thought, as it wore off, that you would
+be different. The horror has gone now, Lawrence. We know that it was an
+accident, it might as well have been another as you. But you have not
+changed. I have given up hoping. I have tried everything else, and I am a
+very miserable woman. Now I am going to pray to you, Lawrence. You do not
+care for me more. Pretend that you do! You cannot give me your love. Give
+me the best you can. Don't despise me too utterly, Lawrence! Pity me, if
+you will. Heaven knows I need it. And--you will be a little kind!"
+
+Her hands were clasped about his neck. He disengaged himself gently.
+
+"Blanche!" he cried, hoarsely, "I love another woman!"
+
+"Are you engaged to her?"
+
+"No! Not now!"
+
+"Then what does it matter? What does it matter, anyhow? It is not the
+real thing I am asking you for, Lawrence--only the make-belief! Keep the
+rest for her, if you must, but give me lies, false looks, hollow
+caresses, anything! You see what depths I have fallen to."
+
+He held her hands tightly. A great pity for her filled his heart--pity
+for her, and for himself.
+
+"Blanche," he said, "there is one way only. It is for you to decide. Will
+you marry me? I will do my best to make you a good husband!"
+
+"Marry you?" she gasped. "Lawrence, I dare not!"
+
+"I cannot alter the past," he said, sadly. "It never seemed to me
+possible that you could care for my--after what happened. But--"
+
+"Oh, it is not that," she interrupted. "There is--the other woman, and,
+Lawrence, I should be afraid. I am not good enough!"
+
+"Whatever you are, Blanche," he said, gravely, "remember that it is I who
+am responsible for your having been left alone to face the world. Your
+follies belong to me. I am quite free to share their burden with you."
+
+"But the other woman?" she faltered.
+
+"I must love her always," he said, quietly, "but I cannot marry her."
+
+"And you would kiss me sometimes, Lawrence?" she whispered.
+
+He took her quietly into his arms and kissed her forehead.
+
+"I will do my best, Blanche," he said. "I dare not promise any more."
+
+
+
+
+BOOK III
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+MATRIMONY AND AN AWKWARD MEETING
+
+
+"How delightfully Continental!" Blanche exclaimed, as the head-waiter
+showed them to their table. "Hester, did you ever see anything more
+quaint?"
+
+"It is perfect," the girl answered, leaning back in her chair, and
+looking around with quiet content.
+
+Mannering took up the menu and ordered dinner. Then he lit a cigarette
+and looked around.
+
+"It certainly is quaint," he said. "One dines out of doors often enough,
+especially over here, but I have never seen a courtyard made such
+excellent use of before. The place is really old, too."
+
+They had found their way to a small seaside resort, in the north of
+France, which Mannering had heard highly praised by some casual
+acquaintance. The courtyard of the small hotel was set out with round
+dining tables, and the illumination was afforded by Japanese lanterns
+hung from every available spot. A small band played from a wooden
+balcony. Monsieur, the proprietor, walked anxiously from table to
+table, all smiles and bows. Through the roofed way, which led from the
+street, one caught a distant glimpse of the sea.
+
+Mannering, to the surprise of his friends, and to his own secret
+amazement, had survived the crisis which had seemed at one time likely
+enough to wreck his life. Politically he was no longer a great power, for
+the party whose cause he had half espoused had met with a distinct
+reverse, and he himself was without a seat in Parliament, but amongst the
+masses his was still a name to conjure with. Socially his marriage with
+Blanche Phillimore had scarcely proved the disaster which every one had
+anticipated. Her old ways and manner of life lay in the background. She
+had aged a little, perhaps, and grown thinner, but she had shown from the
+first an almost pathetic desire to adapt her life to his, to assume an
+altogether unobtrusive position, and if she could not in any way
+influence his destiny, at least she did not hamper it. She had made no
+demands upon him which he was not able to grant. She had lived where he
+had suggested, she had never embarrassed him with too vehement an
+affection. As for Mannering himself, he had found solace in work.
+Defeated at the polls, he had declined a safe seat, and remained the
+chosen independent candidate of a great Northern constituency. He
+addressed public meetings occasionally, and he contributed to the
+reviews. Without having ever finally committed himself to a definite
+scheme of tariff reform, he preached everywhere the doctrine of
+consideration. In a modified way he was reckoned now as one of its
+possible supporters.
+
+They were almost halfway through their dinner when some commotion was
+heard in the narrow street outside. Then with much tooting of horns and
+the shrill shouting of directions from the bystanders, two heavily laden
+touring cars turned slowly into the cobbled courtyard, and drew up within
+a few feet of the semicircular line of tables. Mannering's little party
+watched the arrivals with an interest shared by every one in the place.
+Muffled up in cloaks and veils, they were at first unrecognized. It was
+Mannering himself who first realized who they were.
+
+"Clara!" he exclaimed to the young lady who was standing almost by his
+side. "Welcome to Bonestre!"
+
+She turned towards him with a little start.
+
+"Uncle!" she exclaimed. "How extraordinary! Why, how long have you been
+here?"
+
+"We arrived this afternoon," he answered. "You remember Hester, don't
+you? And this is Mrs. Mannering."
+
+Clara shook hands with both. She declared afterwards that she was
+surprised into it, but she would certainly never have recognized in the
+quiet, rather weary-looking, woman who sat at her uncle's side the
+Blanche Phillimore whom she had more than once passionately declared that
+she would sooner die than speak to. She murmured a few mechanical words,
+and then, suddenly realizing the situation, she glanced a little
+anxiously over her shoulder.
+
+"You know who I am with, uncle?" she whispered.
+
+But Mannering was already face to face with Berenice. She held out her
+hand without hesitation. If she felt any emotion she concealed it
+perfectly. Her voice was steady and cordial, if her cheeks were pale. The
+dust lay thickly upon them all. Mannering, tall and grave in his plain
+dinner clothes and black tie, stood almost like a statue before her,
+until her extended hand invited his movement.
+
+"What an extraordinary meeting," she said, quietly. "I am very glad to
+see you again, Mr. Mannering. We have had such a ride, all the way from
+Havre along roads an inch thick in dust. This is your wife, is it not?
+I am very glad to know you, Mrs. Mannering."
+
+All that might have been embarrassing in the encounter seemed dissolved
+by the utterly conventional tone of her greeting. Sir Leslie Borrowdean
+came up and joined them, and Lord and Lady Redford. Then the little
+party, escorted by the landlord, disappeared into the hotel. Mannering
+resumed his seat and continued his dinner. He leaned over and addressed
+his wife. His tone was kinder than usual.
+
+"When we have had our coffee," he said, "I hope that you will feel like
+a walk. The moon is coming up over the sea."
+
+She shook her head.
+
+"Take Hester," she said. "She loves that sort of thing. I have a
+headache, and I should like to go upstairs as soon as possible."
+
+So Hester walked with Mannering out to the rocks where pools of water,
+left by the tide, shone like silver in the moonlight. They talked very
+little at first, but as they leaned over the rail and looked out seawards
+Hester broke the silence, and spoke of the things which they both had in
+their minds.
+
+"I am sorry they came," she said. "I am afraid it will upset mother, and
+it is not pleasant for you, is it?"
+
+"For me it is nothing, Hester," he answered, "and I hope that your mother
+will not worry about it. They all behaved very nicely, and we need not
+see much of them."
+
+She passed her arm through his.
+
+"Tell me how you feel about it," she begged. "It must seem to you like a
+glimpse of the life you left when--when you--married!"
+
+"Hester," he said, earnestly, "don't make any mistake about this. Don't
+let your mother make any mistake. It was my political change of views
+which separated me from all my former friends--that entirely. To them I
+am an apostate, and a very bad sort of one. I deserted them just when
+they needed me. I did it from convictions which are stronger to-day than
+ever. But none the less I threw them over. I always said that they very
+much exaggerated my importance as a factor in the situation, and my words
+are proved. They carried the elections without any difficulty, and they
+have formed a strong Government. They can afford to be magnanimous to me.
+If I had stayed with them I should have been in office. As it was, I lost
+even my seat."
+
+"You did what you thought was right," she said, softly. "No one can do
+any more!"
+
+Mannering thought over her words as they walked homewards over the
+sand-dunes. Yes, he had done that! Was he satisfied with the result? He
+had become a minor power in politics. Men spoke of him as a weakling--as
+one who had shrunk from the burden of great responsibility, and left the
+friends who had trusted him in the lurch. And then--there was the other
+thing. He had paid a great price for this woman's salvation. Had he
+succeeded? She had given up all her old ways. She dressed, she lived, she
+carried herself through life even with a furtive, almost a pathetic,
+attempt to reach his standard. Often he caught her watching him as though
+fearful lest some word or action of hers had been displeasing to him.
+And yet--he wondered--was this what she had hoped for? Had he given her
+what she had the right to expect? Had he indeed received value for the
+price he had paid? He asked Hester a sudden question:
+
+"Hester, is your mother happy?"
+
+Hester started a little.
+
+"If she is not," she answered, gravely, "she must be a very ungrateful
+woman."
+
+He left it at that, and together they retraced their steps to the hotel.
+Hester slipped up to her room by a side entrance, but Mannering was
+obliged to pass the table where the new arrivals were lingering over
+their coffee. Clara and Lord Redford both called to him.
+
+"Come and have a smoke with us, Mannering, and tell us all about this
+place," the latter said. "The Duchess and your niece are charmed with it,
+and they want to stay for a few days. Are there any golf links?"
+
+"Come and sit next me, uncle," Clara cried, "and tell me how you like
+being guardian to an heiress. How I have blessed that dear departed aunt
+of mine every day of my life."
+
+Mannering accepted a cigarette, and sat down.
+
+"The golf links are excellent," he said. "As for your aunt, Clara, she
+was a very sensible woman. Her money was so well invested that I have
+practically nothing to do. I expect my duties will commence when the
+young men come!"
+
+"Miss Mannering," Sir Leslie said, gravely, "is not at all attracted by
+young men. She prefers something more staid. I have serious hopes that
+before our little tour is over I shall have persuaded her to marry me!"
+
+"You dear man!" Clara exclaimed. "I only wish you'd give me the chance."
+
+"There's a brazen child to have to chaperon," the Duchess said.
+"Positively asking for a proposal."
+
+"And not in vain," Sir Leslie declared. "Walk down to the sea with me,
+Miss Clara, and I'll propose to you in my most approved fashion. I think
+you said that the investments were sound, Mannering?"
+
+"The investments are all right," Mannering answered, "but I shall have
+nothing to do with fortune-hunters."
+
+"And I a Cabinet Minister!" Sir Leslie declared. "Miss Clara, let us have
+that walk."
+
+"To-morrow night," she promised. "When I get up it will be to go to bed.
+Even your love-making, Sir Leslie, could not keep me awake to-night."
+
+The Duchess rose. The dust was gone, but she was pale, and looked tired.
+
+"Let us leave these men to make plans for us," she said. "I hope we shall
+see something of you to-morrow, Mr. Mannering. Good-night, everybody."
+
+Mannering rose and bowed with the others. For a moment their eyes met.
+Not a muscle of her face changed, and yet Mannering was conscious of a
+sudden wave of emotion. He understood that she had not forgotten!
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+
+THE SNUB FOR BORROWDEAN
+
+
+Berenice sat at one of the small round tables in the courtyard, finishing
+her morning coffee. Sir Leslie sat upon the steps by her side. It was one
+of those brilliant mornings in early September, when the sunlight seems
+to find its way everywhere. Even here, surrounded by the pile of worn
+grey stone buildings, which threw shadows everywhere, it had penetrated.
+A long shaft of soft, warm light stretched across the cobbles to their
+feet. Berenice, slim and elegant, fresh as the morning itself, glanced up
+at her companion with a smile.
+
+"Clara," she remarked, "does not like to be kept waiting."
+
+"She is not down yet," he answered, "and there is something I want to say
+to you."
+
+Her delicate eyebrows were a trifle uplifted.
+
+"Do you think that you had better?" she asked.
+
+"I am a man," he said, "and things are known to me which a woman would
+scarcely discover. Do you think that it is quite fair to send Lady
+Redford out motoring with Mrs. Mannering?"
+
+"Why not?"
+
+"Lady Redford is, of course, ignorant of Mrs. Mannering's antecedents.
+What you may do yourself concerns no one. You make your own social laws,
+and you have a right to. But I do not think that even you have a right to
+pass Blanche Phillimore on to your friends, even under the shelter of
+Mannering's name."
+
+Berenice looked at him for several seconds without speaking. Borrowdean
+bit his lip.
+
+"If we were not acquaintances of long standing, Sir Leslie," she said,
+calmly, "I should consider your remarks impertinent. As it is, I choose
+to look upon them as a regrettable mistake. The person, whoever she may
+be, whom the Duchess of Lenchester chooses to receive is usually
+acceptable to her friends. I beg that you will not refer to the subject
+again."
+
+Sir Leslie bowed.
+
+"I have no more to say," he declared. "Knowing naturally a good deal more
+than you concerning the lady in question, I considered it my duty to say
+what I have said."
+
+"It is the sort of duty," Berenice murmured, "which the whole world seems
+to accept always with a relish. One does not expect it so much from your
+sex. Mrs. Mannering was born one of us, and she has had an unhappy life.
+If she has been indiscreet she has her excuses. I choose to whitewash
+her. Do you understand? I pay dearly enough for my social position, and I
+certainly claim its privileges. I recognize Mrs. Mannering, and I require
+my friends to do so."
+
+Sir Leslie rose up.
+
+"You are, if you will forgive my saying so," he remarked, drily, "more
+generous than wise."
+
+"That," she answered, "is my affair. Here comes Clara. Before you start,
+find Mr. Mannering. He is in the hotel somewhere writing letters, and
+tell him that when he has finished I wish to speak to him."
+
+Sir Leslie only bowed. He felt himself opposed by a will as strong as his
+own, and he was too seriously annoyed to trust himself to speech. Clara,
+in her cool white linen dress, came strolling up.
+
+"What have you been doing to Sir Leslie?" she asked, laughing. "He has
+just gone into the hotel with a face like a thunder-cloud."
+
+"I have been giving him a lesson in Christian charity," Berenice
+answered. "He needs it."
+
+Clara nodded. She understood.
+
+"I think you are awfully kind," she said.
+
+Berenice smiled.
+
+"I hate all narrowness," she said, "and if there is a man on God's earth
+who deserves to have people kind to him it is your uncle."
+
+Sir Leslie returned, and he and Clara departed for the golf links.
+Berenice was left alone in the little grey courtyard, fragrant with the
+perfume of scented shrubs and blossoming plants, filled too, with the
+warm sunlight, which seemed to find its way into every corner. She sat at
+her little table, paler than a few moments ago, her teeth clenched, her
+white fingers clasped together. Underneath her muslin blouse her heart
+had suddenly commenced to beat fiercely--a sense of excitement, long
+absent, was stealing through her veins. The bonds which a year's studied
+self-repression had forged were snapped apart. She knew now what it
+meant, the great inexpressible thing, the one eternal emotion which has
+come throbbing down the world from the days when poets sung their first
+song and painters flung truth on to canvas. She was a woman like the
+others, and she loved. Her unique position in society, her carefully
+studied life, her lofty ambitions, were like vain things crumbling into
+dust before her eyes. A year of cold misery seemed atoned for by the
+simple fact that within a few yards of her he sat writing--that within a
+few minutes he would be by her side. Of the future she scarcely thought.
+Hers was the woman's love, content with small things. Its passion was of
+the soul, and its song was self-sacrifice. But if she had known--if she
+had only known!
+
+He came out to her soon. His manner was quiet and a little grave.
+Self-control came easier to him because the truth had been with him
+longer. Nevertheless, he was not wholly at his ease.
+
+"You know what has happened?" she asked, smiling. "The Redfords have
+taken Mrs. Mannering and her daughter motoring, and Sir Leslie and Clara
+have gone to the golf links. You and I are left to entertain one
+another."
+
+"What would you like to do?" he asked, simply.
+
+"I should like to walk," she answered, "down by the sea somewhere. I am
+ready now."
+
+They made their way through the little town, along the promenade and on
+to the sands beyond. Then a climb, and they found themselves in a thick
+wood stretching back inland from the sea. She pointed to a fallen trunk.
+
+"Let us sit down," she said. "There are so many things I want to ask
+you."
+
+On the way they had spoken only of indifferent matters, yet from the
+first Mannering had felt the presence of a subtle something in her
+deportment towards him, for which he could find no explanation. He
+himself was feeling the tension of this meeting. He had expected to find
+her so different. Gracious, perhaps, because she was a great lady, but
+certainly without any of these suggestions of something kept back, which
+continually, without any sort of direct expression, made themselves felt.
+And when they sat down she said nothing. He had the feeling that it was
+because she dared not trust herself to speak. Surprise and agitation kept
+him, too, silent.
+
+At last she spoke. Her voice was not very steady, and she avoided looking
+at him.
+
+"I should like," she said, "to have you tell me about yourself--about
+your life--and your work."
+
+"It is told in a few words," he answered. "Somewhere, somehow, I have
+failed! I could not adopt the Birmingham programme, I could not oppose
+it. You know what isolation means politically?--abuse from one side and
+contempt from the other. That is what I am experiencing. The working
+classes have some faith in me, I believe. My work, such as it is, is
+solely for them. I suppose the papers tell the truth when they say that
+mine is a ruined career--only, you see, I am trying to do the best I can
+with the pieces."
+
+"Yes," she said, softly, "that is something. To do the best one can with
+the pieces. We all might try to do that."
+
+He smiled.
+
+"You, at least, have no need to consider such a thing," he said. "So far
+as any woman can be preeminent in politics you have succeeded in becoming
+so. I saw that a lady's paper a few weeks ago said that your influence
+outside the Cabinet was more powerful than any one man's within it."
+
+"Yes," she said, calmly, "the papers talk like that. It gives their
+readers something to laugh at! I wonder what you would say, my friend, if
+I told you that I, too, am engaged in that same thankless task. I, too,
+am striving to do the best I can with the pieces."
+
+"You are not serious!" he protested.
+
+"I am very serious indeed," she declared. "Shall I tell you more? Shall
+I tell you when I made my mistake?"
+
+"No!" he cried, hoarsely.
+
+"But I shall," she continued, suddenly gripping his arm. "I meant to tell
+you. I brought you here to tell you. I made my mistake when I let Leslie
+Borrowdean take you back to Lord Redford just as we were entering the
+rose-garden at Bayleigh. Do you remember? I made my mistake when I
+suffered anything in this great world to come between me and a woman's
+only chance of happiness! I made my mistake when I was too proud to tell
+you that I loved you, and that nothing else in the world mattered. There!
+You tried me hard! You know that! But my mistake was none the less fatal.
+I ought to have held fast by you, and I let you go. And I shall suffer
+for it all my days."
+
+"You cared like that?" he cried.
+
+"Worse!" she answered, turning her flushed face towards him. "I care now.
+Kiss me, Lawrence!"
+
+He held her in his arms. Time stood still until she stole away with an
+odd little laugh.
+
+"There," she said, "I have vindicated myself. No one can ever call me a
+proud woman again. And you know the truth! I might have had you all to
+myself and I let you go. Now I am going to do the best I can with the
+pieces. The half of you I want belongs to your wife. I must be content
+with the other half. I suppose I may have that?"
+
+"But your friends--"
+
+"Bosh! My friends and your wife must make the best of it. I shan't rob
+her again as I did just now. You can blot that out--antedate it. It
+belonged to the past. But I am not going through life as I have gone
+through this last year, longing for a sight of you, longing to hear you
+speak, and denying myself just because you are married. Live with your
+wife, Lawrence, and make her as happy as you can, but remember that you
+owe me a great deal, too, and you must do your best to pay it. Don't look
+at me as though I were talking nonsense."
+
+He held her hand. She placed it in his unresistingly. All the lines in
+his face seemed smoothed out. The fire of youth was in his eyes.
+
+"Do you wonder that I am surprised?" he asked. "All this year you have
+made no sign. All the time I have been schooling myself to forget you."
+
+"Don't dare to tell me that you have succeeded!" she exclaimed.
+
+"Not an iota!" he answered. "It was the most miserable failure of my
+life."
+
+She smiled upon him delightfully, and gently withdrew her hand.
+
+"Lawrence," she said, "I am going to talk to you seriously for one
+minute. You are too conscientious for a politician. Don't let the same
+vice spoil our friendship! Certain things you owe to your wife. Mind,
+I admit that, though from some points of view even that might be
+disputed. But you also owe me certain things--and I mean to be paid.
+I won't be avoided, mind. I want to be treated as a very close--and
+dear--companion--and--kiss me once more, Lawrence, and then we'll begin,"
+she wound up, with a little sob in her throat.
+
+An hour later the whole party had _dejeuner_ together in the courtyard of
+the little hotel. The Duchess was noticeably kind to Mrs. Mannering, and
+she snubbed Sir Leslie. Clara looked on a little gravely. The situation
+contained many elements of interest.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III
+
+CLOUDS--AND A CALL TO ARMS
+
+
+The first cloud appeared towards the end of the third day at Bonestre.
+Blanche and Sir Leslie were left alone, and he hastened to improve the
+opportunity.
+
+"The Duchess and your husband," he remarked, "appear very easily to have
+picked up again the threads of their old friendship."
+
+"The Duchess," she answered, "is a very charming woman. I am sure that
+you find her so, don't you?"
+
+"We are very old friends," he answered, "but I was never admitted to
+exactly the same privileges as your husband enjoys."
+
+"The Duchess," she answered, calmly, "is a woman of taste!"
+
+Sir Leslie muttered something under his breath. Blanche made a movement
+as though to take up again the book which she had been reading in a
+sheltered corner of the hotel garden.
+
+"Don't you think," he said, "that we should make better friends than
+enemies?"
+
+"I am not at all sure," she answered, calmly. "To tell you the truth,
+I don't fancy you particularly in either capacity."
+
+He laughed unpleasantly.
+
+"You are scarcely complimentary," he remarked.
+
+"I did not mean to be," she answered. "Why should I?"
+
+"You are content, then, to let your husband drift back into his old
+relations with the Duchess? I presume that you know what they were?"
+
+"Whether I am or not," she answered, "what business is it of yours?"
+
+"I will tell you, if you like," he answered. "In fact, I think it would
+be better. It has been the one desire of my life to marry the Duchess of
+Lenchester myself."
+
+She smiled at him scornfully.
+
+"Come," she said, "let me give you a little advice. Give up the idea.
+They say that lookers-on see most of the game, and so far as I am
+concerned I'm certainly the looker-on of this party. The Duchess doesn't
+care a row of pins about you!"
+
+"There are other marriages, besides marriages of affection," Sir Leslie
+said, stiffly. "The Duchess is ambitious."
+
+"But she is also a woman," Blanche declared. "And she is in love."
+
+"With whom?"
+
+"With my husband! I presume that is clear enough to most people!"
+
+Sir Leslie was a little staggered.
+
+"You take it very coolly," he remarked.
+
+"Why not? The Duchess is too proud a woman to give herself away, and my
+husband--belongs to me!"
+
+"You haven't any idea of taking poison, or anything of that sort, I
+suppose, have you?" he inquired. "The other woman nearly always does
+that."
+
+"Not in real life," Blanche answered, composedly. "Besides, I'm not the
+other woman--I'm the one. The Duchess is the other!"
+
+"But your husband--"
+
+"Do you know, I should prefer not to discuss my husband--with you,"
+Blanche said, calmly, taking up her book. "He is not the sort of man you
+would be at all likely to understand. If you want a rich wife why don't
+you propose to Clara Mannering? I suppose you knew that some unheard-of
+aunt had left her fifty thousand pounds?"
+
+Sir Leslie rose to his feet.
+
+"I don't fancy that you and I are very sympathetic this afternoon," he
+remarked. "I will go and see if any one has returned."
+
+"Do," she answered. "I shall miss you, of course, but my book is
+positively absorbing, and I am dying to go on with it."
+
+Sir Leslie left the garden without another word. Blanche held her book
+before her face until he had disappeared. Then it slipped from her
+fingers. She looked hard into a cluster of roses, and she saw only two
+figures--always the same figures. Her eyes were set, her face was wan and
+old.
+
+"The other woman!" she murmured to herself. "That is what I am. And
+I can't live up to it. I ought to take poison, or get run over or
+something, and I know very well I shan't. Bother the man! Why couldn't
+he leave me alone?"
+
+After dinner that evening she accepted her husband's nightly invitation
+and walked with him for a little while. The others followed.
+
+"How much longer can you stay away from England, Lawrence?" she asked
+him.
+
+"Oh--a fortnight, I should think," he answered. "I am not tied to any
+particular date. You like it here, I hope?"
+
+"Immensely! Are--our friends going to remain?"
+
+"I haven't heard them say anything about moving on yet," he answered.
+
+"Are you in love with the Duchess still, Lawrence?"
+
+"Am I--Blanche!"
+
+"Don't be angry! You made a mistake once, you know. Don't make another.
+I'm not a jealous woman, and I don't ask much from you, but I'm your
+wife. That's all!"
+
+She turned and called to Hester. The little party rearranged itself.
+Mannering found himself with Berenice.
+
+"What was your wife saying to you?" she asked.
+
+He shrugged his shoulders.
+
+"It was the beginning," he remarked.
+
+Berenice sighed.
+
+"It is a strange thing," she said, "but in this world no one can ever be
+happy except at some one else's expense. It is a most unnatural law of
+compensation. Shall we move on to-morrow?"
+
+"The day after," he pleaded. "To-morrow we are going to Berneval."
+
+She nodded.
+
+"We are queer people, I think," she said. "I have been perfectly
+satisfied this week simply to be with you. When it comes to an end
+I should like it to come suddenly."
+
+He thought of her words an hour later, when on his return to the hotel
+they handed him a telegram. He passed it on at once to Lord Redford, and
+glanced at his watch.
+
+"Poor Cunningham," he said, "it was a short triumph for him. I must go
+back to-night, or the first train to-morrow morning. The sitting member
+for my division of Leeds died suddenly last night, Blanche," he said to
+his wife. "I must be on the spot at once."
+
+She rose to her feet.
+
+"I will go and pack," she said.
+
+Lady Redford followed her very soon. Clara and Sir Leslie had not yet
+returned from their stroll. Lord Redford remained alone with them.
+
+"I scarcely know what sort of fortune to wish you, Mannering," he said.
+"Perhaps your first speech will tell us."
+
+Berenice leaned back in her chair.
+
+"I can't imagine you as a labour member in the least," she remarked.
+
+"Doesn't this force your hand a little, Mannering?" Lord Redford said. "I
+understand that you were anxious to avoid a direct pronouncement upon the
+fiscal policy for the present."
+
+Mannering nodded gravely.
+
+"It is quite time I made up my mind," he said. "I shall do so now."
+
+"May we find ourselves in the same lobby!" Lord Redford said. "I will go
+and find my man. He may as well take you to the station in the car."
+
+Berenice smiled at Mannering luminously through the shadowy lights.
+
+"Dear friend," she said, "I am delighted that you are going. Our
+little time here has been delightful, but we had reached its limit.
+I like to think that you are going back into the thick of it. Don't be
+faint-hearted, Lawrence. Don't lose faith in yourself. You have chosen
+a terribly lonely path; if any man can find his way to the top, you can.
+And don't dare to forget me, sir!"
+
+He caught her cheerful tone.
+
+"You are inspiring," he declared. "Thank heaven, I have a twelve hours'
+journey before me. I need time for thought, if ever a man did."
+
+"Don't worry about it," she answered, lightly. "The truth is somewhere in
+your brain, I suppose, and when the time comes you will find it. Much
+better think about your sandwiches."
+
+The car backed into the yard. Blanche reappeared, and behind her
+Mannering's bag.
+
+"I do hope that Hester and I have packed everything," she said. "We could
+come over to-morrow, if there's anything you want us for. If not we shall
+stay here for another week. Good-bye!"
+
+She calmly held up her lips, and Mannering kissed them after a moment's
+hesitation. She remained by his side even when he turned to say farewell
+to Berenice.
+
+"I am sure you ought to be going," she said calmly. "I will send on your
+letters if there are any to-morrow. Wire your address as soon as you
+arrive. Good luck!"
+
+The car glided away. They all stood in a group to see him go, and waved
+indiscriminate farewells. Blanche moved a little apart as the car
+disappeared, and Berenice watched her curiously. She was rubbing her lips
+with her handkerchief.
+
+"A sting!" she remarked, becoming suddenly aware of the other's scrutiny.
+"Nothing that hurts very much!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV
+
+DISASTER
+
+
+Mannering, in his sitting-room at last, locked the door and drew a long
+breath of relief. Upon his ear-drums there throbbed still the yells of
+his enthusiastic but noisy adherents--the truculent cries of those who
+had heard his great speech with satisfaction, of those who saw pass from
+amongst themselves to a newer school of thought one whom they had
+regarded as their natural leader. It was over at last. He had made his
+pronouncement. To some it might seem a compromise. To himself it was the
+only logical outcome of his long period of thought. He spoke for the
+workingman. He demanded inquiry, consideration, experiment. He demanded
+them in a way of his own, at once novel and convincing. Many of the most
+brilliant articles which had ever come from his pen he abjured. He drew
+a sharp line between the province of the student and the duty of the
+politician.
+
+And now he was alone at last, free to think and dream, free to think of
+Bonestre, to wonder what reports of his meeting would reach the little
+French watering-place, and how they would be received. He could see
+Berenice reading the morning paper in the little grey courtyard, with the
+pigeons flying above her head and the sunlight streaming across the
+flags. He could hear Borrowdean's sneer, could see Lord Redford's shrug
+of the shoulders. There is little sympathy in the world for the man who
+dares to change his mind.
+
+There was a knock at the door, and his servant entered with a tray.
+
+"I have brought the whiskey and soda, sandwiches and cigarettes, sir," he
+announced. "I am sorry to say that there is a person outside whom I
+cannot get rid of. His name is Fardell, and he insists upon it that his
+business is of importance."
+
+Mannering smiled.
+
+"You can show him up at once," he ordered; "now, and whenever he calls."
+
+Fardell appeared almost directly. Mannering had seen him before during
+the day, but noticed at once a change in him. He was pale, and looked
+like a man who had received some sort of a shock.
+
+"Come in, Fardell, and sit down," Mannering said. "You look tired. Have a
+drink."
+
+Fardell walked straight to the tray and helped himself to some neat
+whiskey.
+
+"Thank you, sir," he said. "I--I've had rather a knockout blow."
+
+He emptied the tumbler and set it down.
+
+"Mr. Mannering, sir," he said, "I've just heard a man bet twenty to one
+in crisp five-pound bank-notes that you never sit for West Leeds."
+
+"Was he drunk or sober?" Mannering asked.
+
+"Sober as a judge!"
+
+Mannering smiled.
+
+"How often did you take him?" he asked.
+
+"Not once! I didn't dare!"
+
+Mannering, who had been in the act of helping himself to a whiskey and
+soda, looked around with the decanter in his hand.
+
+"I don't understand you," he said, bewildered. "You know very well that
+the chances, so far as they can be reckoned up, are slightly in my
+favour."
+
+"They were!" Fardell answered. "Heaven knows what they are now."
+
+Mannering was a little annoyed. It seemed to him that Fardell must have
+been drinking.
+
+"Do you mind explaining yourself?" he asked.
+
+"I can do so," Fardell answered. "I must do so. But while I am about it
+I want you to put on your hat and come with me."
+
+Mannering laughed shortly.
+
+"What, to-night?" he exclaimed. "No, thank you. Be reasonable, Fardell.
+I've had my day's work, and I think I've earned a little rest. To be
+frank with you, I don't like mysteries. If you've anything to say, out
+with it."
+
+"Right!" Richard Fardell answered. "I am going to ask you a question,
+Mr. Mannering. Go back a good many years, as many years as you like.
+Is there anything in your life as a younger man, say when you first
+entered Parliament, which--if it were brought up against you now--might
+be--embarrassing?"
+
+Mannering did not answer for several moments. He was already pale and
+tired, but he felt what little colour remained leave his face. Least of
+all he had expected this. Even now--what could the man mean? What could
+be known?
+
+"I am not sure that I understand you," he said. "There is nothing that
+could be known! I am sure of that."
+
+"There is a person," Fardell said, slowly, "who has made extraordinary
+statements. Our opponents have got hold of him. The substance of them is
+this: He says that many years ago you were the lover of a married woman,
+that you sold her husband worthless shares and ruined him, and that
+finally--in a quarrel--he declares that he was an eye-witness of
+this--that you killed him."
+
+Mannering slowly subsided into his chair. His cheeks were blanched.
+Richard Fardell watched him with feverish anxiety.
+
+"It is a lie," Mannering declared. "There is no man living who can say
+this."
+
+"The man says," Fardell continued, stonily, "that his name is Parkins,
+and that he was butler to Mr. Stephen Phillimore eleven years ago."
+
+"Parkins is dead!" Mannering said, hoarsely. "He has been dead for many
+years."
+
+"He is living in Leeds to-day," Fardell answered. "A journalist from the
+_Yorkshire Herald_ was with him for two hours this afternoon."
+
+"Blanche--I was told that he was dead," Mannering said.
+
+"Then the story is true?" Fardell asked.
+
+"Not as you have told it," Mannering answered.
+
+"There is truth in it?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+Richard Fardell was silent for several moments. He paced up and down the
+room, his hands behind his back, his eyebrows contracted into a heavy
+frown. For him it was a bitter moment. He was only a half-educated,
+illiterate man, possessed of sturdy common sense and a wonderful tenacity
+of purpose. He had permitted himself to indulge in a little silent but
+none the less absolute hero-worship, and Mannering had been the hero.
+
+"You must come with me at once and see this man," he said at last. "He
+has not yet signed his statement. We must do what we can to keep him
+quiet."
+
+Mannering took up his coat and hat without a word. They left the hotel,
+and Fardell summoned a cab.
+
+"It is a long way," he explained. "We will drive part of the distance and
+walk the rest. We may be watched already."
+
+Mannering nodded. The last blow was so unexpected that he felt in a sense
+numbed. His speech only a few hours ago had made large inroads upon his
+powers of endurance. His partial recantation had cost him many hours of
+torture, from which he was still suffering. And now, without the
+slightest warning, he found himself face to face with a crisis far
+graver, far more acute. Never in his most gloomy moments had he felt any
+real fear of a resurrection of the past such as that with which he was
+now threatened. It was a thunderbolt from a clear sky. Even now he found
+it hard to persuade himself that he was not dreaming.
+
+They were in the cab for nearly half an hour before Fardell stopped and
+dismissed it. Then they walked up and down and across streets of small
+houses, pitiless in their monotony, squalid and depressing in their
+ugliness.
+
+Finally Fardell stopped, and without hesitation knocked at the door of
+one of them. It was opened by a man in shirt-sleeves, holding a tallow
+candle in his hand.
+
+"What yer want?" he inquired, suspiciously.
+
+"Your lodger," Fardell answered, pushing past him and drawing Mannering
+into the room. "Where is he?"
+
+The man jerked his thumb upwards.
+
+"Where he won't be long," he answered, shortly. "The likes of 'im having
+visitors, and one a toff, too. Say, are yer going to pay his rent?"
+
+"We may do that," Fardell answered. "Is he upstairs?"
+
+"Ay!" the man answered, shuffling away. "Pay 'is rent, and yer can chuck
+'im out of the winder, if yer like!"
+
+They climbed the crazy staircase. Fardell opened the door of the room
+above without even the formality of knocking. An old man sat there,
+bending over a table, half dressed. Before him were several sheets of
+paper.
+
+"I believe we're in time," Fardell muttered, half to himself. "Parkins,
+is that you?" he asked, in a louder tone.
+
+The old man looked up and blinked at them. He shaded his eyes with one
+hand. The other he laid flat upon the papers before him. He was old,
+blear-eyed, unkempt.
+
+"Is that Master Ronaldson?" he asked, in a thin, quavering tone. "I've
+signed 'em, sir. Have yer brought the money? I'm a poor old man, and I
+need a drop of something now and then to keep the life in me. If yer'll
+just hand over a trifle I'll send out for--eh--eh, my landlord, he's a
+kindly man--he'll fetch it. Eh? Two of yer! I don't see so well as I
+did. Is that you, Mr. Ronaldson, sir?"
+
+Fardell threw some silver coins upon the table. The old man snatched them
+up eagerly.
+
+"It's not Mr. Ronaldson," he said, "but I daresay we shall do as well. We
+want to talk to you about those papers there."
+
+The old man nodded. He was gazing at the silver in his hand.
+
+"I've writ it all out," he muttered. "I told 'un I would. A pound a week
+for ten years. That's what I 'ad! And then it stopped! Did she mean me to
+starve, eh? Not I! John Parkins knows better nor that. I've writ it all
+out, and there's my signature. It's gospel truth, too."
+
+"We are going to buy the truth from you," Fardell said. "We have more
+money than Ronaldson. Don't be afraid. We have gold to spare where
+Ronaldson had silver."
+
+The old man lifted the candle with shaking fingers. Then it dropped with
+a crash to the ground, and lay there for a moment spluttering. He shrank
+back.
+
+"It's 'im!" he muttered. "Don't kill me, sir. I mean you no harm. It's
+Mr. Mannering!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V
+
+THE JOURNALIST INTERVENES
+
+
+The old man had sunk into a seat. His face and hands were twitching with
+fear. His eyes, as though fascinated, remained fixed upon Mannering's.
+All the while he mumbled to himself. Fardell drew Mannering a little on
+one side.
+
+"What can we do with him?" he asked. "We might tear up those sheets, give
+him money, keep him soddened with drink. And even then he'd give the
+whole show away the moment any one got at him. It isn't so bad as he
+makes out, I suppose?"
+
+"It is not so bad as that," Mannering answered, "but it is bad enough."
+
+"What became of the woman?" Fardell asked. "Parkins's mistress, I mean?"
+
+"She is my wife," Mannering answered.
+
+Fardell threw out his hands with a little gesture of despair.
+
+"We must get him away from here," he said. "If Polden gets hold of him
+you might as well resign at once. It is dangerous for you to stay. He was
+evidently expecting that fellow Ronaldson to-night."
+
+Mannering nodded.
+
+"What shall you do with him?" he asked.
+
+"Hide him if I can," Fardell answered, grimly. "If I can get him out of
+this place, it ought not to be impossible. The most important thing at
+present is for you to get away without being recognized."
+
+Mannering took up his hat.
+
+"I will go," he said. "I shall leave the cab for you. I can find my way
+back to the hotel."
+
+Fardell nodded.
+
+"It would be better," he said. "Turn your coat-collar up and draw your
+hat down over your eyes. You mustn't be recognized down here. It's a
+pretty low part."
+
+Nevertheless, Mannering had not reached the corner of the street before
+he heard hasty footsteps behind him, and felt a light touch upon his
+shoulder. He turned sharply round.
+
+"Well, sir!" he exclaimed, "what do you want with me?"
+
+The newcomer was a tall, thin young man, wearing glasses, and although he
+was a complete stranger to Mannering, he knew at once who he was.
+
+"Mr. Mannering, I believe?" he said, quickly.
+
+"What has my name to do with you, sir?" Mannering answered, coldly.
+
+"Mine is Ronaldson," the young man answered. "I am a reporter."
+
+Mannering regarded him steadily for a moment.
+
+"You are the young man, then," he said, "who has discovered the mare's
+nest of my iniquity."
+
+"If it is a mare's nest," the young man answered, briskly, "I shall be
+quite as much relieved as disappointed. But your being down here doesn't
+look very much like that, does it?"
+
+"No man," Mannering answered, "hears that a bomb is going to be thrown at
+him without a certain amount of curiosity as to its nature. I have been
+down to examine the bomb. Frankly, I don't think much of it."
+
+"You are prepared, then, to deny this man Parkins's story?" the reporter
+asked.
+
+"I am prepared to have a shot at your paper for libel, anyhow, if you use
+it," Mannering answered.
+
+"Do you know the substance of his communication?"
+
+"I can make a pretty good guess at it," Mannering answered.
+
+"You really mean to deny it, then?" the reporter asked.
+
+"Assuredly, for it is not true," Mannering answered. "Pray don't let me
+detain you any longer!"
+
+He turned on his heel and walked away, but the reporter kept pace with
+him.
+
+"You will pardon me, but this is a very serious affair, Mr. Mannering,"
+he said. "Serious for both of us. Do you mind discussing it with me?"
+
+"Not in the least," Mannering answered, "so long as you permit me to
+continue my way homewards."
+
+"I will walk with you, sir, if you don't mind," the reporter said. "It is
+a very serious matter indeed, this! My people are as keen as possible to
+make use of it. If they do, and it turns out a true story, you, of
+course, will never sit for Leeds. And if on the other hand it is false,
+I shall get the sack!"
+
+"Well, it is false," Mannering said.
+
+"Some parts of it, perhaps," the young man answered, smoothly. "Not all,
+Mr. Mannering."
+
+"Old men are garrulous," Mannering remarked. "I expect you will find that
+your friend has been letting his tongue run away with him."
+
+"He has committed his statements to paper," Ronaldson remarked.
+
+"And signed them?"
+
+"He is willing to do so," the reporter answered. "I was to have fetched
+them away to-night."
+
+"You may be a little late," Mannering remarked.
+
+The _double entente_ in his tone did not escape Ronaldson's notice. He
+stopped short on the pavement.
+
+"So you have bought him," he remarked.
+
+Mannering glanced at him superciliously.
+
+"Will you pardon me," he said, "if I remark that this conversation has no
+particular interest for me? Don't let me bring you any further out of
+your way."
+
+Ronaldson took off his hat.
+
+"Very good, sir," he remarked. "I will wish you good-night!"
+
+Mannering pursued his way homeward with the briefest of farewells. The
+young reporter retraced his steps. Arrived at Parkins's lodgings he
+mounted the stairs, and found the room empty. He returned and interviewed
+the landlord. From him he only learned that Parkins had departed with one
+of two gentlemen who had come to see him that evening, and that they had
+paid his rent for him. The reporter was obliged to depart with no more
+satisfactory information. But next morning, before nine o'clock, he was
+waiting to see Mannering, and would not be denied. He was accompanied,
+too, by a person of no less importance than the editor of the _Yorkshire
+Herald_ himself.
+
+Mannering kept them waiting an hour, and then received them coolly.
+
+"I am glad to see you, Mr. Polden," he said, glancing at the editor's
+card. "I have already had some conversation with our young friend there,"
+he added, glancing towards the reporter. "What can I have the pleasure of
+doing for you?"
+
+Mr. Polden produced a sheet of proofs from his pocket. He passed them
+over to Mannering.
+
+"I should like you to examine these, sir," he said.
+
+"In type already!" Mannering remarked, calmly.
+
+"In proof for our evening's issue," Polden answered.
+
+Mannering read them through.
+
+"It will cost you several thousand pounds!" he said.
+
+"Then the money will be well spent," Polden answered. "No one has a
+higher regard for you politically than I have, Mr. Mannering, but we
+don't want you as member for West Leeds. That's all!"
+
+"It happens," Mannering said, "that I am particularly anxious to sit for
+West Leeds."
+
+"You will go on--in the face of this?" the editor asked Mannering.
+
+"Yes, and with the suit for libel which will follow," Mannering answered.
+
+The editor shrugged his shoulders.
+
+"Do me the favour to believe, Mr. Mannering," he said, "that we have not
+gone into this matter blindfold. We had a preliminary intimation as to
+this affair from a person whose word carries considerable weight, and our
+investigations have been searching. I will admit that the disappearance
+of the man Parkins is a little awkward for us, but we have ample
+justification in publishing his story."
+
+"I trust for your sakes that the law courts will support your views,"
+Mannering said, coldly. "I scarcely think it likely."
+
+"Mr. Mannering," Polden said, "I quite appreciate your attitude, but do
+you really think it is a wise one? I very much regret that it should have
+been our duty to unearth this unsavoury story, and having unearthed it,
+to use it. But you must remember that the issue on hand is a great one. I
+belong to the Liberal party and the absolute Free Traders, and I consider
+that for this city to be represented by any one who shows the least
+indication of being unsafe upon this question would be a national
+disaster and a local disgrace. I want you to understand, therefore, that
+I am not playing a game of bluff. The proofs you hold in your hand have
+been set and corrected. Within a few hours the story will stand out in
+black and white. Are you prepared for this?"
+
+Mannering shrugged his shoulders.
+
+"I am not prepared to resign my candidature, if that is what you mean,"
+he said. "I presume that nothing short of that will satisfy you?"
+
+"Nothing," the editor answered, firmly.
+
+"Then there remains nothing more," Mannering remarked, coldly, "than for
+me to wish you a very good-morning."
+
+"I am sorry," Mr. Polden said. "I trust you will believe, Mr. Mannering,
+that I find this a very unpleasant duty."
+
+Mannering made no answer save a slight bow. He held open the door, and
+Mr. Polden and his satellite passed out. Afterwards he strolled to the
+window and looked down idly upon the crowd.
+
+"If I act in accordance with the conventions," he murmured to himself, "I
+suppose I ought to take, a glass of poison, or blow my brains out.
+Instead of which--"
+
+He shrugged his shoulders, and rang for his hat and coat. He was due at
+one of the great foundries in half an hour to speak to the men during
+their luncheon interval.
+
+"Instead of which," he muttered, as he lit a cigarette, "I shall go on to
+the end."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI
+
+TREACHERY AND A TELEGRAM
+
+
+The sunlight streamed down into the little grey courtyard of the _Leon
+D'or_ at Bonestre. Sir Leslie Borrowdean, in an immaculate grey suit, and
+with a carefully chosen pink carnation in his button-hole, sat alone at a
+small table having his morning coffee. His attention was divided between
+a copy of the _Figaro_ and a little pile of letters and telegrams on the
+other side of his plate. More than once he glanced at the topmost of the
+latter and smiled.
+
+Mrs. Mannering and Hester came down the grey stone steps and crossed
+towards their own table. The former lingered for a moment as she passed
+Sir Leslie, who rose to greet the two women.
+
+"Another glorious day!" he remarked. "What news from Leeds?"
+
+"None," she said. "My husband seldom writes."
+
+Sir Leslie smiled reflectively, and glanced towards the pile of papers at
+his side.
+
+"Perhaps," she remarked, "you know better than I do how things are going
+there."
+
+He shook his head.
+
+"I have no correspondents in Leeds," he answered.
+
+At that moment a puff of wind disturbed the papers by his side. A
+telegram would have fluttered away, but Blanche Mannering caught it at
+the edge of the table. She was handing it back, when a curious expression
+on Borrowdean's face inspired her with a sudden idea. She deliberately
+looked at the telegram, and her fingers stiffened upon it. His forward
+movement was checked. She stood just out of his reach.
+
+"No correspondents in Leeds," she repeated. "Then what about this
+telegram?"
+
+"You will permit me to remind you," he said, stretching out his hand for
+it, "that it is addressed to me."
+
+Her hands were behind her. She leaned over towards him.
+
+"It can be addressed to you a thousand times over," she answered, "but
+before I part with it I want to know what it means."
+
+Borrowdean was thinking quickly. He wanted to gain time.
+
+"I do not even know which document you have--purloined," he said.
+
+"It is from Leeds," she answered, "and it is signed Polden. 'Parkins
+found, has made statement, appears to-night.' Can you explain what this
+means, Sir Leslie Borrowdean?"
+
+Her voice was scarcely raised above a whisper, but there was a dangerous
+glitter in her eyes. There were few traces left of the woman whom once
+before he had found so easy a tool.
+
+"I cannot tell you," he answered. "It is not an affair for you to concern
+yourself with at all."
+
+"Not an affair for me to concern myself about!" she repeated, leaning
+a little over towards him. "Isn't it my husband against whom you are
+scheming? Don't I know what low tricks you are capable of? Isn't this
+another proof of it? Not an affair for me to concern myself about,
+indeed! Didn't you worm the whole miserable story out of me?"
+
+"My dear Mrs. Mannering!"
+
+She checked a torrent of words. Her bosom was heaving underneath her lace
+blouse. She was pale almost to the lips. The sudden and complete disuse
+of all manner of cosmetics had to a certain extent blanched her face.
+There was room there now for the writing of tragedy. Borrowdean, still
+outwardly suave, was inwardly cursing the unlucky chance which had blown
+the telegram her way.
+
+"Might I suggest," he said, in a low tone, "that we postpone our
+conversation till after breakfast time? The waiters seem to be favouring
+us with a great deal of attention, and several of them understand
+English."
+
+She did not even turn her head. Thinner a good deal since her marriage,
+she seemed to him to have grown taller, to have gained in dignity and
+presence, as she stood there before him, her angry eyes fixed upon his
+face. She was no longer a person to be ignored.
+
+"You must tell me about this--or--"
+
+"Or?" he repeated, stonily.
+
+"Or I will make a public statement," she answered. "If you ruin my
+husband's career, I can at least do the same with yours. Politics is
+supposed to be a game for honourable men to play with honourable weapons.
+I wonder if Lord Redford would approve of your methods?"
+
+"You can go and ask him, my dear madam," he answered. "I am perfectly
+ready to defend myself."
+
+"Defend! You have no defence," she answered. "Can you deny that you are
+plotting to keep my husband out of Parliament now, just as a few months
+ago you plotted to bring him back? You are making use of a personal
+secret, a forgotten chapter of his life, to move him about like a puppet
+to do your will."
+
+"I work for the good of a cause and a great party," he answered. "You do
+not understand these things."
+
+"I understand you so far as this," she answered. "You are one of those to
+whom life is a chessboard, and your one aim is to make the pieces work
+for you, and at your bidding, till you sit in the place you covet. There
+isn't much of the patriot about you, Sir Leslie Borrowdean."
+
+He glanced down at his unfinished breakfast. He had the air of one who is
+a little bored.
+
+"My dear lady," he said, "is this discussion really worth while?"
+
+"No," she answered, bluntly, "it isn't. You are quite right. We are
+wandering from the subject."
+
+"Let us talk," he suggested, "after breakfast. Give me back that telegram
+now, and I will explain it, say, in the garden in half an hour. I detest
+cold coffee."
+
+"You can do like me, order some fresh," she said. "If I let you out of my
+sight I know very well how much I shall see of you for the rest of the
+day. Explain now if you can. What does that telegram mean?"
+
+"Surely it is obvious enough," he answered. "The man Parkins, whom you
+told me was dead, is alive and in Leeds. He has seen Mannering's name
+about, has been talking, and the press have got hold of his story. I am
+sorry, but there was always this possibility, wasn't there?"
+
+"And this telegram?" she asked.
+
+"I know Polden, the editor of the paper, and he referred to me to know if
+there could be any truth in it."
+
+"These are lies!" she declared. "You were the instigator. You set them on
+the track."
+
+"I have nothing more to say," Borrowdean declared, coldly.
+
+"I have," she said. "I shall take this telegram to Lord Redford. I shall
+tell him everything!"
+
+A faint smile flickered upon Borrowdean's lips.
+
+"Lord Redford would, I am sure, be charmed to hear your story," he
+remarked. "Unfortunately he started for Dieppe this morning before eight
+o'clock, and will not be back until to-morrow."
+
+"And to-morrow will be too late," she added, rapidly pursuing his train
+of thought. "Then I will try the Duchess!"
+
+He started very slightly, but she saw it.
+
+"Sit down for a moment, Mrs. Mannering," he said.
+
+She accepted the chair he placed for her. There was a distinct change in
+his manner. He realized that this woman held a trump card against him.
+Even in her hands it might mean disaster.
+
+"Blanche--" he began.
+
+"Thank you," she interrupted, "I prefer 'Mrs. Mannering.'"
+
+He bit his lips in annoyance.
+
+"Mrs. Mannering, then," he continued, "we have been allies before, and I
+think that you will admit that I have always kept faith with you. I don't
+see any reason why we should play at being enemies. You have a price, I
+suppose, for that telegram and your silence. Name it."
+
+She nodded.
+
+"Yes, I have a price," she admitted.
+
+"Remember that, after all, this is not a great issue," he said. "If your
+husband does not get in for Leeds he will probably find a seat somewhere
+else."
+
+"That is false," she answered, "If your man Polden publishes Parkins's
+story my husband's political career is over, and you know it. Do keep as
+near to the truth as you can."
+
+"I will give you," he said, "five hundred pounds for that telegram and
+your silence."
+
+She rose slowly to her feet. A dull flush of colour mounted almost to
+her eyes. Borrowdean watched her anxiously. Then for a moment came an
+interruption. The Duchess was descending the grey stone steps from the
+hotel.
+
+She had addressed some word of greeting to them. They both turned towards
+her. She wore a white serge dress, and she carried a white lace parasol
+over her bare head. She moved towards them with her usual languid grace,
+followed by her maid carrying a tiny Maltese dog and a budget of letters.
+The loiterrers in the courtyard stared at her with admiration. It was
+impossible to mistake her for anything but a great lady.
+
+"You have the air of conspirators, you two!" she said, as she approached
+them. "Is it an expedition for the day that you are planning?"
+
+Blanche Mannering turned her back upon Borrowdean.
+
+"Sir Leslie," she said, "has just offered me five hundred pounds for a
+telegram which I have here and for my silence concerning its contents.
+I was wondering whether he had bid high enough."
+
+The Duchess looked from one to the other. She almost permitted herself to
+be astonished. Borrowdean's face was dark with anger. Blanche Mannering's
+apparent calmness was obviously of the surface only.
+
+"Are you serious?" she asked.
+
+"Miserably so!" Blanche answered. "Sir Leslie has strange ideas of
+honour, I find. He is making use of a story which I told him once
+concerning my husband, to drive him out of political life. Duchess, will
+you do me the favour to let me talk with you for five minutes, and to
+make Sir Leslie Borrowdean promise not to leave this hotel till you have
+seen him again?"
+
+"I have no intention of leaving the hotel," Sir Leslie said, stiffly.
+
+Berenice pointed to her table.
+
+"Come and take your coffee with me, Mrs. Mannering," she said.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Mannering passed through the day like a man in a nightmare. He addressed
+two meetings of working-men, and interviewed half a dozen of his workers.
+At mid-day the afternoon edition of the _Yorkshire Herald_ was being sold
+in the streets. He bought a copy and glanced it feverishly through.
+Nothing! He lunched and went on with his work. At three o'clock a second
+edition was out. Again he purchased a copy, and again there was nothing.
+The suspense was getting worse even than the disaster itself. Between
+four and five they brought him in a telegram. He tore it open, and found
+that it was from Bonestre. The words seemed to stare up at him from the
+pink form. It was incredible:
+
+"Polden muzzled. Go in and win."
+
+The form fluttered from his fingers on to the floor of his sitting-room.
+He stood looking at it, dazed. Outside, a mob of people, standing round
+his carriage, were shouting his name.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII
+
+MR. MANNERING, M.P.
+
+
+Mannering threw up his window with a sigh of immense relief. The air was
+cold and fresh. The land, as yet unwarmed by the slowly rising sun, was
+hung with a faint autumn mist. Traces of an early frost lay in the brown
+hedgerows inland; the sea was like a sheet of polished glass. Gone the
+smoke-stained rows of shapeless houses, the atmosphere polluted by a
+thousand chimneys belching smuts and black vapour, the clanging of
+electric cars, the rattle of all manner of vehicles over the cobbled
+streets. Gone the hoarse excitement of the shouting mobs, the poisonous
+atmosphere of close rooms, all the turmoil and racket and anxiety of
+those fighting days. He was back again in Bonestre. Below in the
+courtyard the white cockatoo was screaming. The waiters in their linen
+coats were preparing the tables for the few remaining guests. And the
+other things were of yesterday!
+
+Mannering had arrived in the middle of the night unexpectedly, and his
+appearance was a surprise to every one. He had knocked at his wife's door
+on his way downstairs, but Blanche had taken to early rising, and was
+already down. He found them all breakfasting together in a sheltered
+corner of the courtyard.
+
+Berenice, after the usual greetings and explanations, smiled at him
+thoughtfully.
+
+"I am not sure," she said, "whether I ought to congratulate you or not.
+Sir Leslie here thinks that you mean mischief!"
+
+"Only on the principle," Borrowdean said, "that whoever is not with us is
+against us."
+
+"We are all agreed upon one thing," Berenice said. "It was your last
+speech, the one the night before the election, which carried you in. A
+national party indeed! A legislator, not a politician! You talked to
+those canny Yorkshiremen with your head in the clouds, and yet they
+listened."
+
+Mannering smiled as he poured out his coffee.
+
+"I talked common sense to them," he remarked, "and Yorkshiremen like
+that. We have been slaves to the old-fashioned idea of party Government
+long enough. It's an absurd thing when you come to think of it. Fancy a
+great business being carried on by a board of partners of divergent
+views, and unable to make a purchase or a sale or effect any change
+whatever without talking the whole thing threadbare, and then voting
+upon it. The business would go down, of course!"
+
+"Party Government," Borrowdean declared, "is the natural evolution of
+any republican form of administration. A nation that chooses its own
+representatives must select them from its varying standpoint."
+
+"Their views may differ slightly upon some matters," Mannering said,
+"but their first duty should be to come into accord with one another.
+It is a matter for compromises, of course. The real differences between
+intelligent men of either party are very slight. The trouble is that
+under the present system everything is done to increase them instead
+of bridging them over."
+
+"If you had to form a Government, then," Berenice asked, "you would not
+choose the members from one party?"
+
+"Certainly not," Mannering answered. "Supposing I were the owner of
+Redford's car there, and wanted a driver. I should simply try to get the
+best man I could, and I should certainly not worry as to whether he were,
+say, a churchman or a dissenter. The best man for the post is what the
+country has a right to expect, whatever he may call himself, and the
+country doesn't get it. The people pay the piper, and I consider that
+they get shocking bad value for their money. The Boer War, for instance,
+would have cost us less than half as much if we had had the right men to
+direct the commercial side of it. That money would have been useful in
+the country just now."
+
+"An absolute monarchy," Hester said, smiling, "would be really the most
+logical form of Government, then? But would it answer?"
+
+"Why not?" Borrowdean asked. "If the monarch were incapable he would of
+course be shot!"
+
+"A dictator--" Berenice began, but Mannering held out his hands,
+laughing.
+
+"Think of my last few days, and spare me!" he begged. "I have thirty-six
+hours' holiday. How do you people spend your time here?"
+
+Berenice took him away with her as a matter of course. Blanche watched
+them depart with a curious tightening of the lips. She was standing alone
+in the gateway of the hotel, and she watched them until they were out of
+sight. Borrowdean, sauntering out to buy some papers, paused for a moment
+as he passed.
+
+"Your husband, Mrs. Mannering," he said, drily, "is a very fortunate
+man."
+
+She made no reply, and Borrowdean passed on. Hester came out with a
+message from Lady Redford--would Mrs. Mannering care to motor over to
+Berneval for luncheon? Blanche shook her head. She scarcely heard the
+invitation. She was still watching the two figures disappearing in the
+distance. Hester understood, but she spoke lightly.
+
+"I believe," she said, "that the Duchess still has hopes of Mr.
+Mannering."
+
+"She is a persistent woman," Blanche answered. "They say that she
+generally succeeds. Let us go in."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Berenice was listening to Mannering's account of his last few days'
+electioneering.
+
+"The whole affair came upon me like a thunderclap," he told her. "Richard
+Fardell found it out somehow, and he took me to see Parkins. But it was
+too late. Polden had hold of the story and meant to use it. I never
+imagined but that Parkins had been talking and this journalist had got
+hold of him by accident. Now I understand that it was Borrowdean who was
+pulling the strings."
+
+She nodded.
+
+"He traced Parkins out some time ago, and knew exactly where he was to be
+found."
+
+"I think," Mannering said, "that it is time Borrowdean and I came to some
+understanding. I haven't said anything about it yet. I don't exactly know
+what to say now. You are a very generous woman."
+
+She sighed.
+
+"No," she said, "I don't think that. Sir Leslie is a schemer of the class
+I detest. I listened to him once, and I have regretted it ever since. Yet
+you must remember this! If it had not been for him you would have been at
+Blakely to-day."
+
+His thoughts carried him backwards with a rush. Once more the thrall of
+that quiet life of passionless sweetness held him. He looked back upon it
+curiously, as a man who has passed into another country. Days of physical
+exaltation, alone with the sun and the wind and all the murmuring voices
+of Nature, God's life he had called it then. And now! The stress of
+battle was hard upon him. He was fighting in the front ranks, a somewhat
+cheerless battle, fighting for great causes with inefficient weapons. But
+he could not go back. Life had become a more strenuous, a more vital, a
+less beautiful thing! He felt himself ageing. All the inevitable sadness
+of the man in touch with the world's great problems was in his heart. But
+he could not go back.
+
+"Yes," he said, quietly, "I owe that much to Borrowdean."
+
+"There is a question," she said, "which I have wanted to ask you. Do you
+regret, or are you glad to have been forced out once more upon the
+world's stage?"
+
+He smiled.
+
+"How can I answer you?" he asked. "At Blakely I was as happy as I knew
+how to be, and until you came I was content! But to-day, well, there are
+different things. How can I answer your question, indeed? Tell me what
+happiness means! Tell me whether it is an ignoble or a praiseworthy
+state!"
+
+Berenice was silent. Into her face there had come a sudden gravity.
+Mannering, glancing towards her, was at once conscious of the change. He
+saw the weariness so often and zealously repressed, the ageing of her
+face, the sudden triumph of the despair which in the quiet moments
+chilled her heart. It seemed to him that for that moment they had come
+into some closer communion. He bent over towards her.
+
+"Ah!" he murmured, "you, too, are beginning to understand. Happiness is
+only for the ignorant. For you and for me knowledge has eaten its way
+too far into our lives. We climb all the while, but the flowers in the
+meadows are the fairest."
+
+She shook her head.
+
+"The little white flower which grows in the mountains is what we must
+always seek," she answered. "The meadows are for the others."
+
+"We are accursed with this knowledge, and the desire for it," he
+declared, fiercely. "The suffering is for us, and the joy for the beasts
+of the field. Why not throw down the cards? We are the devil's puppets in
+this game of life."
+
+"There is no place for us down there," she answered, sadly. "There is joy
+enough for them, because the finger has never touched their eyes. But for
+us--no, we have to go on! I was a foolish woman, Lawrence. I lost my
+sense of proportion. Traditions, you see, were hard to break away from. I
+did not understand. Let this be the end of all mention of such things
+between us. We have missed the turning, and we must go on. That is the
+hardest thing in life. One can never retrace one's steps."
+
+"We go on--apart?"
+
+"We must," she said. "Don't think me prejudiced, Lawrence. I must stand
+by my party. Theoretically, I think that you are the only logical
+politician I have ever known. Actually, I think that you are steering
+your course towards the sandbanks. You will fail, but you will fail
+magnificently. Well, that is something."
+
+"It is a good deal," he answered, "but if I live long enough, and my
+strength remains, I shall succeed. I shall place the Government of
+this country upon an altogether different basis. I shall empty the
+work-houses and fill the factories. Nothing short of that will content
+me. Nothing short of that would content any man upon whose shoulders the
+burden has fallen."
+
+"You have centuries of prejudice to fight," she warned him. "You may not
+succeed! Yet you have all my good wishes. I shall always watch you."
+
+They turned homeward in silence. All that had passed between them seemed
+to be already far back in the past. Their retrogression seemed almost
+symbolical. They spoke of indifferent things.
+
+"Tell me," he asked, "how you came to know what was going on in Leeds."
+
+"It was your wife," she said, "who discovered it!"
+
+"My wife?"
+
+"She saw a telegram on Sir Leslie's table at breakfast, a telegram from
+the man Polden. She read it and demanded an explanation. Sir Leslie tried
+all he could to wriggle out of it, but in vain. She appealed to me. Even
+I had a great deal of difficulty in dealing with him, but eventually he
+gave way."
+
+"Then the telegram," Mannering asked, "wasn't that from you?"
+
+She shook her head.
+
+"It was from your wife," she said. "I cannot take much credit for myself.
+It is she whom you must thank for your election. I came out at rather
+a dramatic moment. Sir Leslie had just offered her money, five hundred
+pounds, I think, to give him back his telegram and say nothing. She
+appealed to me at once, and Sir Leslie looked positively foolish."
+
+"I am much obliged to you for telling me," Mannering muttered. He
+remembered now that he had scarcely spoken a dozen words to his wife
+since his return.
+
+"Mrs. Mannering appears to have your interests very much at heart,"
+Berenice said, quietly. "She proved herself quite a match for Sir Leslie.
+I think that he would have left here at once, only we are expecting Clara
+back."
+
+Mannering smiled scornfully.
+
+"I do not think that even Clara," he said, "is quite fool enough not to
+recognize in Borrowdean the arrant opportunist. For my part I am glad
+that all pretence at friendship between us is now at an end. He is one
+of those men whom I should count more dangerous as a friend than as an
+enemy."
+
+Berenice did not reply. They were already in the courtyard of the hotel.
+Blanche was in a wicker chair in a sunny corner, talking to a couple of
+young Englishmen. Berenice turned towards the steps. They parted without
+any further words.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII
+
+PLAYING THE GAME
+
+
+Mannering for a moment hesitated. One of the two young men who were
+talking to his wife he recognized as a former acquaintance of hers--one
+of a genus whom he had little sympathy with and less desire to know.
+While he stood there Blanche laughed at some remark made by one of her
+companions, and the laugh, too, seemed somehow to remind him of the old
+days. He moved slowly forward.
+
+The young men strolled off almost at once. Mannering took a vacant chair
+by his wife's side.
+
+"I have only just heard," he said, "how much I have to thank you for. I
+took it for granted somehow that it was the Duchess who had discovered
+our friend Borrowdean's little scheme and sent that telegram. Why didn't
+you sign it?"
+
+She shrugged her shoulders.
+
+"It was the Duchess who made him chuck it up," she said. "I could never
+have made him do that. I was an idiot to let Parkins stay in England at
+all."
+
+"I always understood," he said, "that he was dead."
+
+"I let you think so," she answered. "I thought you might worry. But
+seriously, if he told the truth, now, after all these years, would any
+one take any notice of it?"
+
+"Very likely not," he said, "so far as regards any criminal
+responsibility. But our political life is fenced about by all the
+middle-class love of propriety and hatred of all form of scandal.
+Parkins's story, authenticated or not, would have lost me my seat
+for Leeds."
+
+"Then I am very glad," she said, "that I happened to see the telegram. Do
+you know where Parkins is now?"
+
+"One of my supporters," he said, "a queer little man named Richard
+Fardell, has him in tow. He is bringing him up to London, I think."
+
+She nodded.
+
+"What are you doing this afternoon?" he asked.
+
+She looked at him curiously.
+
+"Mr. Englehall has asked me to go out in his car," she said. "I am rather
+tired of motoring, but I think I shall go."
+
+Mannering lit a cigarette which he had just taken from his case.
+
+"I don't think I should," he remarked.
+
+She turned her head slowly, and looked at him.
+
+"Why not?" she asked. "How can it concern you? Your plans for the
+afternoon are, I presume, already made!"
+
+"It may not concern me directly," he answered, "but I have an idea that
+Mr. Englehall is not exactly the sort of person I care to have you
+driving about with."
+
+She laughed hardly.
+
+"I am most flattered by your interest in me," she declared. "Pray
+consider Mr. Englehall disposed of. You have some other plans, perhaps?"
+
+"If you care to," he said, "we will walk down to the club for lunch and
+come home by the sea."
+
+"Alone?"
+
+"Certainly! Unless you choose to bring Hester."
+
+She rose slowly to her feet.
+
+"No," she said. "Let us go alone. It will be almost the first time since
+we were married, I think. I am curious to see how much I can bore you!
+Will you wait here while I find a hat?"
+
+She disappeared inside the hotel. Mannering watched her absently. In
+a vague sort of way he was wondering what it was that had made their
+married life so completely a failure. He had imagined her as asking very
+little from him, content with the shelter of his name and home, content
+at any rate without those things of which he had made no mention when he
+had spoken to her of marriage. And he was becoming gradually aware that
+it was not so. She expected, had hoped for more. The terms which he had
+zealously striven to cultivate with her were terms of which she clearly
+did not approve. The signs of revolt were already apparent.
+
+Mannering became absorbed in thought. He remembered clearly the feelings
+with which he had gone to her and made his offer. He went over it all
+again. Surely he had made himself understood? But then there was her
+confession to him, the confession of her love. He had ignored that, but
+it was unforgetable. Had he not tacitly accepted the whole situation? If
+so, was he doing his duty? The shelter of his name and home, what were
+those to a warm-hearted woman, if she loved him? He had married her,
+loving another woman. She must have known this, but did she understand
+that he was not prepared to make any effort to accept the inevitable? He
+was still deep in thought when Berenice came out.
+
+"What are you doing there all by yourself?" she asked. "Where is your
+wife?"
+
+"She has gone to get a hat," he answered. "We thought of going to the
+club for _dejeuner_."
+
+She nodded.
+
+"A delightful idea," she said. "Do invite me, and I will take you in the
+car. Mrs. Mannering likes motoring, I know."
+
+"Of course!" he said. "We shall be delighted!"
+
+She beckoned to her chauffer, who was in the courtyard. Just then Blanche
+came out. She had changed her gown for one of plain white serge, and she
+wore a hat of tuscan straw which Mannering had once admired.
+
+"You won't mind motoring, Mrs. Mannering?" Berenice said, as she
+approached. "I have invited myself to luncheon with you, and I am going
+to take you round to the club in the car."
+
+Blanche stood quite still for a moment. The sun was in her eyes, and she
+lowered her parasol for a moment.
+
+"It will be very pleasant," she said, quietly, "only I think that I will
+go in and change my hat. I thought that we were going to walk."
+
+She retraced her steps, walking a little wearily. Berenice came and sat
+down by Mannering's side.
+
+"I hope Mrs. Mannering does not object to my coming," she said. "It
+occurred to me that she was not particularly cordial."
+
+"It is only her manner," he answered. "It is very good of you to take
+us."
+
+"Your wife doesn't like me," Berenice said. "I wonder why. I thought that
+I had been rather decent to her."
+
+"Blanche is a little odd," Mannering answered. "I am afraid that it is my
+fault. Here are the Redfords. I wonder if they would join us."
+
+"Three," she murmured, "is certainly an awkward number."
+
+In the end the party became rather a large one, for Lord Redford met some
+old friends at the club who insisted upon their joining tables. In the
+interval, whilst they waited for luncheon, Mannering contrived to have
+a word alone with his wife.
+
+"I am not responsible," he said, "for this enlargement of our party. The
+Duchess invited herself."
+
+"It does not matter," she declared, listlessly. "What are you doing
+afterwards?"
+
+"Playing golf, I fancy," he answered. "You heard what Redford said about
+a foursome."
+
+"And you are returning--when?"
+
+"I must leave here at six to-morrow morning."
+
+They were leaning over the white palings of the pavilion, looking out
+upon the last green. She seemed to be watching the approach of two
+players who were just coming in.
+
+"It is a long way to come," she remarked, "for so short a time."
+
+He shrugged his shoulders.
+
+"The aftermath of a contested election is a thing to escape from," he
+said. "I felt that I wanted to get as far away as possible, and then
+again I wanted to find out who it was who had sent that telegram."
+
+They sat apart at luncheon, and Blanche was much quieter than usual. The
+others were all old friends. It seemed to her more than ordinarily
+apparent that she was present on sufferance, accepted as Mannering's
+wife, as an evil to be endured, and, so far as possible, ignored.
+Mannering himself spoke to her now and then across the table. Lord
+Redford, always good-natured, made a few efforts to draw her into the
+conversation. But it seemed to her that she had lost her confidence. The
+freemasonry of old acquaintance which existed between all of them left
+her outside an invisible but very real circle. Words came to her with
+difficulty. She felt stupid, almost shy. When she made an effort to break
+through it she was acutely conscious of her failure. Her laugh was too
+hard, it lacked sincerity or restraint. The cigarette which she smoked
+out of bravado with her coffee, seemed somehow out of place. When at last
+luncheon was over Mannering left his place and came over to her.
+
+"The Duchess and I," he said, "are going to play Lord Redford and Mrs.
+Arbuthnot. Won't you walk round with us? The links are really very
+pretty."
+
+"Thanks, I hate watching golf," she answered, rising and shaking out her
+skirt. "Hester and I will walk home."
+
+"Do take the car, Mrs. Mannering," Berenice said. "It will simply be
+waiting here doing nothing."
+
+"Thank you," Blanche answered. "I shall enjoy the walk."
+
+The foursome was played in very leisurely fashion. There was plenty of
+time for conversation.
+
+"I don't quite understand your wife," Berenice said to Mannering. "Her
+dislike of me is a little too obvious. What does it mean? Do you know?"
+
+He shook his head. He was looking very pale and tired.
+
+"I am not sure that I know anything about it at all," he said. "I am
+beginning to distrust my own judgment."
+
+"Your marriage--" she began, thoughtfully.
+
+"Don't let us talk about it," he interrupted. "I tried to pay a debt.
+It seems to me that I have only incurred a fresh one."
+
+They were silent for some time. Then their opponents lost a ball and
+displayed no particular diligence in attempting to find it. Berenice sat
+down upon a plank seat.
+
+"Your marriage," she said, "seemed always to me a piece of quixotism.
+I never altogether understood it."
+
+"It was an affair of impulse," he said, slowly. "Life from a personal
+point of view had lost all interest to me. I did not dream after
+my--shall we call it apostacy?--that I could rely upon even a modicum
+of your friendship. I looked upon myself as an outcast commencing life
+afresh. Then chance intervened. I thought I saw my way to making some
+atonement to a woman whose life I had certainly helped to ruin. That was
+where the serious part of the mistake came. I thought what I had to offer
+would be sufficient. I am beginning now to doubt it."
+
+"And what are you going to do?" she asked, looking steadily away from
+him.
+
+"Heaven knows," he answered, bitterly. "I cannot give what I do not
+possess."
+
+Was it his fancy, or was there a gleam of satisfaction about her still,
+pale face? He went on.
+
+"I don't want to play the hypocrite. On the other hand I don't want all
+that I have done to go for nothing. Can you advise me?"
+
+"No, nor any one else," she answered, softly.
+
+"Yet I can perhaps correct a little your point of view. I think that you
+overestimate your indebtedness to the woman whom you have made your wife.
+Her husband was a weak, dissipated creature and he was a doomed man long
+before that unfortunate day. It is even very questionable whether that
+scene in which you figured had anything whatever to do in hastening his
+death. That is a good many years ago, and ever since then you seem to
+have impoverished yourself to find her the means to live in luxury. I
+consider that you paid your debt over and over again, and that your final
+act of self-abnegation was entirely uncalled for. What more she wants
+from you I do not know. Perhaps I can imagine."
+
+There was a moment's silence. She turned her head and looked at
+him--looked him in the eyes unshamed, yet with her secret shining there
+for him to see.
+
+"There may be others, Lawrence," she said, "to whom you owe something. A
+woman cannot take back what she has given. There may be sufferers in the
+world whom you ought also to consider. And a woman loves to think that
+what she may not have herself is at least kept sacred--to her memory."
+
+"Fore!" cried Lord Redford, who had found his ball. "Awfully decent of
+you people to wait so long. We were afraid you meant to claim the hole!"
+
+Mannering rose to play his shot.
+
+"The Duchess and I, Lord Redford," he said, lightly, "scorn to take small
+advantages. We mean to play the game!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX
+
+THE TRAGEDY OF A KEY
+
+
+Blanche, in a plain black net gown, sat on Lord Redford's right hand at
+the hastily improvised dinner party that evening. Berenice, more subtly
+and more magnificently dressed, was opposite, by Mannering's side. The
+conversation seemed mostly to circle about them.
+
+"A very charming place," Lord Redford declared. "I have enjoyed my stay
+here thoroughly. Let us hope that we may all meet here again next year,"
+he added, raising his glass. "Mannering, you will drink to that, I hope?"
+
+"With all my heart," Mannering answered. "And you, Blanche?"
+
+She raised her almost untasted glass and touched it with her lips. She
+set it down with a faint smile. Berenice moved her head towards him.
+
+"Your wife is not very enthusiastic," she remarked.
+
+"She neither plays golf nor bathes," Mannering said. "It is possible that
+she finds it a little dull."
+
+"Both are habits which it is possible to acquire," Berenice answered. "I
+am telling your husband, Mrs. Mannering," she continued, "that you ought
+to learn to play golf."
+
+"Lawrence has offered to teach me more than once," Blanche answered,
+calmly. "I am afraid that games do not attract me. Besides, I am too old
+to learn!"
+
+"My dear Mrs. Mannering!" Lord Redford protested.
+
+"I am forty-two," Blanche replied, "and at that age a woman thinks twice
+before she begins anything new in the shape of vigorous exercise.
+Besides, I find plenty to amuse me here."
+
+"Might one ask in what direction?" Berenice murmured. "I have found in
+the place many things that are delightful, but not amusing."
+
+"I find amusement often in watching my neighbours," Blanche said. "I like
+to ask myself what it is they want, and to study their way of attaining
+it. You generally find that every one is fairly transparent when once you
+have found the key--and everybody is trying for something which they
+don't care for other people to know about."
+
+The Duchess looked at Blanche steadily. There was a certain insolence,
+the insolence of her aristocratic birth and assured position in the level
+stare of her clear brown eyes. But Blanche did not flinch.
+
+"I had no idea, Mrs. Mannering, that you had tastes of that sort,"
+Berenice said, languidly. "Suppose you give us a few examples."
+
+"Not for the world," Blanche answered, fervently. "Did you say that we
+were to have coffee outside, Lord Redford? How delightful! I wonder if
+Lady Redford is ready."
+
+They all trooped out in a minute or two. Berenice laid her hand upon
+Mannering's arm.
+
+"Your wife," she said, quietly, "is going a little too far. She is
+getting positively rude to me!"
+
+Mannering muttered some evasive reply. He, too, had marked the note of
+battle in Blanche's tone. He had noticed, too, the unusual restraint of
+her manner. She had drunk little or no wine at dinner time, and she had
+talked quietly and sensibly. Directly they reached the courtyard she
+seated herself on a settee for two, and made room for him by her side.
+
+"Come and tell me about the golf match," she said. "Who won?"
+
+Mannering had no alternative but to obey. Lady Redford, however, drew her
+chair up close to theirs, and the conversation was always general.
+Berenice in a few minutes rose to her feet.
+
+"Listen to the sea," she exclaimed. "Don't some of you want to come down
+to the rocks and watch it?"
+
+Blanche rose up at once.
+
+"Do come, Lawrence, if you are not too tired!" she said.
+
+The whole party trooped out on to the promenade. Blanche passed her arm
+through her husband's, and calmly appropriated him.
+
+"You can walk with whom you please presently, Lawrence," she said, "but
+I want you for a few minutes. I suppose you will admit that I have some
+claim?"
+
+"Certainly," Mannering answered. "I have never denied it."
+
+"I am your wife," Blanche said, "though heaven knows why you ever married
+me. The Duchess is, I suppose, the woman whom you would have married if
+you hadn't got into a mess with your politics. She is a very attractive
+woman, and you married me, of course, out of pity, or some such maudlin
+reason. But all the same I am here, and--I don't care what you do when
+I can't see you, but I won't have her make love to you before my face."
+
+"The Duchess is not that sort of woman, Blanche," Mannering said,
+gravely.
+
+"Isn't she?" Blanche remarked, unconvinced. "Well, I've watched her, and
+in my opinion she isn't very different from any other sort of woman. Do
+you wish you were free very much? I know she does!"
+
+"Is there any object to be gained by this conversation?" Mannering asked.
+"Frankly, I don't like it. I made you no absurd promises when I married
+you. I think that you understood the position very well. So far as I know
+I have given you no cause to complain."
+
+They had reached the end of the promenade. Blanche leaned over the rail.
+Her eyes seemed fixed upon a light flashing and disappearing across the
+sea. Mannering stood uncomfortably by her side.
+
+"No cause to complain!" she repeated, as though to herself. "No,
+I suppose not. And yet, how much the better off do you think I am,
+Lawrence? I had friends before of some sort or another. Some of them
+pretended to like me, even if they didn't. I did as I chose. I lived as I
+liked. I was my own mistress. And now--well, there is no one! I enjoy the
+respectability of your name, the privilege of knowing your friends, the
+ability to pay my bills, but I should go stark mad if it wasn't for
+Hester. I gave myself away to you, I know. You married me for pity, I
+know. But what in God's name do I get out of it?"
+
+A note of real passion quivered in her tone. Mannering looked down at her
+helplessly, taken wholly aback, without the power for a moment to
+formulate his thoughts. There was a touch of colour in her pale cheeks,
+her eyes were lit with an unusual fire. The faint moonlight was kind to
+her. Her features, thinner than they had been, seemed to have gained a
+certain refinement. She reminded him more than ever before of the Blanche
+of many years ago. He answered her kindly, almost tenderly.
+
+"I am very sorry," he said, "if I have caused you any suffering. What I
+did I did for the best. I don't think that I quite understood, and I
+thought that you knew--what had come into my life."
+
+"I knew that you cared for her, of course," she answered, with a little
+sob, "but I did not know that you meant to nurse it--that feeling. I
+thought that when we were married you would try to care for me--a little.
+I--Here are the others!"
+
+Lord Redford, who had failed to amuse Berenice, and who had a secret
+preference for the woman who generally amused him, broke up their
+_tete-a-tete_. He led Blanche away, and Mannering followed with Berenice.
+
+"What does this change in your wife mean?" she asked, abruptly.
+
+"Change?" he repeated.
+
+"Yes! She watches us! If it were not too absurd, one would believe her
+jealous. Of course, it is not my business to ask you on what terms you
+are with your wife, but--"
+
+"You know what terms," he interrupted.
+
+Her manner softened. She looked at him for a moment and then her eyes
+dropped.
+
+"I am rather a hateful woman!" she said, slowly. "I wish I had not said
+that. I don't think we have managed things very cleverly, Lawrence.
+Still, I suppose life is made up of these sorts of idiotic blunders."
+
+"Mine," he said, "has been always distinguished by them."
+
+"And mine," she said, "only since I came to Blakely, and learnt to talk
+nonsense in your rose-garden! But come," she added, more briskly, "we are
+breaking our compact. We agreed to be friends, you know, and abjure
+sentiment."
+
+He nodded.
+
+"It seemed quite easy then," he remarked.
+
+"And it is easy now! It must be," she added. "I have scarcely
+congratulated you upon your election. What it all means, and with which
+party you are going to vote, I scarcely know even now. But I can at least
+congratulate you personally."
+
+"You are generous," he said, "for I suppose I am a deserter. As to where
+I shall sit, it is very hard to tell. I fancy myself that we are on the
+eve of a complete readjustment of parties. Wherever I may find myself,
+however, it will scarcely be with your friends."
+
+She nodded.
+
+"I realize that, and I am sorry," she said. "All that we need is a
+leader, and you might have been he. As it is, I suppose we shall muddle
+along somehow until some one comes out of the ruck strong enough to pull
+us together.... Come and see me in London, Lawrence. Who knows but that
+you may be able to convert me!"
+
+"You are too staunch," he answered, "and you have not seen what I have
+seen."
+
+She sighed.
+
+"Didn't you once tell me at Blakely that politics for a woman was a
+mischosen profession--that we were at once too obstinate and too
+sentimental? Perhaps you were right. We don't come into touch with
+the same forces that you meet with, and we come into touch with others
+which make the world seem curiously upside-down. Good-night, Lawrence!
+I am going to my room quietly. Lady Redford wants to play bridge, and I
+don't feel like it! _Bon voyage!_"
+
+Mannering stood alone in the little courtyard, lit now with hanging
+lights, and crowded with stray visitors who had strolled in from the
+streets. The rest of the party had gone into the salon beyond, and
+Mannering felt curiously disinclined to join them. Suddenly there was a
+touch upon his arm. He turned round. Blanche was standing there looking
+up at him. Something in her face puzzled him. Her eyes fell before his.
+She was pale, yet as he looked at her a flood of colour rushed into her
+cheeks. His momentary impression of her eyes was that they were very soft
+and very bright. She had thrown off her wrap, and with her left hand was
+holding up her white skirt. Her right hand was clenched as though holding
+something, and extended timidly towards him.
+
+"I wanted to say good-night to you--and--there was something else--this!"
+
+Something passed from her hand to his, something cold and hard. He looked
+at her in amazement, but she was already on her way up the grey stone
+steps which led from the courtyard into the hotel, and she did not turn
+back. He opened his hand and stared at what he found there. It was a
+key--number forty-four, _Premier etage_.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X
+
+BLANCHE FINDS A WAY OUT
+
+
+Mannering was conscious of an overpowering desire to be alone. He made
+his way out of the courtyard and back to the promenade. Some of the
+lights were already extinguished, and a slight drizzling rain was
+falling. He walked at once to the further wall, and stood leaning over,
+looking into the chaos of darkness. The key, round which his fingers
+were still tightly clenched, seemed almost to burn his flesh.
+
+What to do? How much more of himself was he bound to surrender? Through a
+confusion of thoughts some things came to him then very clearly. Amongst
+others the grim, pitiless selfishness of his life. How much must she have
+suffered before she had dared to do this thing! He had taken up a burden
+and adjusted the weight to suit himself. He had had no thought for her,
+no care save that the seemliness of his own absorbed life might not be
+disturbed. And behind it all the other reason. What a pigmy of a man he
+was, after all.
+
+A clock from the town struck eleven. He must decide! A vision of her rose
+up before him. He understood now her weakness and her strength. She was
+an ordinary woman, seeking the affection her sex demanded from its
+legitimate source. He understood the coming and going of the colour in
+her cheeks, her strained attempts to please, her barely controlled
+jealousy. In that mad moment when he had planned for her salvation he had
+imagined that she would have understood. What folly! Why should she? The
+complex workings of his innermost nature were scarcely likely to have
+been patent to her. What right had he to build upon that? What right, as
+an honest man, to contract a debt he never meant to pay? If he had not at
+the moment realized his responsibilities that was his own fault. From her
+point of view they were obvious enough, and it was from her point of view
+as well as his own that they must be considered.
+
+He turned back to the hotel, walking a little unsteadily. All the time he
+was not sure that this was not a dream. And then on the wet pavement he
+came face to face with two cloaked figures, one of whom stopped short and
+called him by name. It was Berenice!
+
+"You!" he exclaimed, more than ever sure that he was not properly awake.
+
+"Is it so wonderful?" she answered. "To tell you the truth, I was not
+sleepy, and I felt like a little walk. You can go back now, Bryan," she
+said, turning to her maid. "Mr. Mannering will see me home."
+
+As though by mutual consent they crossed to the sea-wall.
+
+"What made you come out again?" she asked. "No, don't answer me! I think
+that I know."
+
+"Impossible," he murmured.
+
+"I was going up to my room," she said, "and as I passed the landing
+window which looks into the courtyard I saw you talking to your wife.
+I--I am afraid that I watched. I saw her leave you."
+
+"Yes!"
+
+"What was it that she gave you? What is it that you have in your hand?"
+
+He opened his fingers. She turned her head away. It seemed to him an
+eternity that she stood there. When she spoke her voice was scarcely more
+than a whisper.
+
+"Lawrence," she said, "we have been very selfish, you and I! There have
+been no words between us, but I think the compact has been there all the
+same. It seemed to me somehow that it was a compensation, that it was
+part of the natural order of things, that as our own folly had kept us
+apart, you should still belong to me--in my thoughts. And I have no right
+to this, or any share of you, Lawrence."
+
+He drew a little nearer to her. She moved instantly away.
+
+"I am glad," she said, "that our party breaks up to-morrow. When we meet
+again, Lawrence, it must be differently. I am parting with a great deal
+that has been precious to me, but it must be. It is quite clear."
+
+"I made no promise!" he cried, hoarsely. "I did not mean--"
+
+She stopped him with a swift glance.
+
+"Never mind that. You and I are not of the race of people who shrink from
+their duty, or fear to do what is right. Your wife's face taught me mine.
+Your conscience will tell you yours."
+
+"You mean?" he exclaimed.
+
+"You know what I mean. We shall meet again, of course, but this is none
+the less our farewell. No, don't touch me! Not even my hand, Lawrence.
+Don't make it any harder. Let us go in."
+
+But he did not move. The place where they stood was deserted. From below
+the white spray came leaping up almost to their faces as the waves beat
+against the wall. Behind them the town was black and deserted, save where
+a few lights gleamed out from the hotel. She shivered a little, and drew
+her cloak around her.
+
+"Come," she said, "I am getting cold and cramped."
+
+He walked by her side to the hotel. At the foot of the steps she left
+him.
+
+"We shall meet again in London," she said, quietly. "Don't be too hard
+upon your old friends when you take your seat. Remember that you were
+once one of us."
+
+She looked round and waved her hand as she disappeared. He caught a
+glimpse of her face as she passed underneath the hanging lamp--the face
+of a tired woman suddenly grown old. With a little groan he made his way
+into the hotel, and slowly ascended the stairs.
+
+Early the next morning Mannering left Bonestre, and in twenty-four hours
+he was back again, summoned by a telegram which had met him in London. It
+seemed to him that everybody at the station and about the hotel regarded
+him with shocked and respectful sympathy. Hester, looking like a ghost,
+took him at once to her room. He was haggard and weary with rapid
+travelling, and he sank into a chair.
+
+"Tell me--the worst!" he said.
+
+"She started with Mr. Englehall about mid-day," Hester said. "They had
+luggage, but I explained that he was going to Paris, she was coming back
+by train. At two o'clock we were rung up on the telephone. Their brake
+had snapped going down the hill by St. Entuiel, and the chauffeur--he is
+mad now--but they think he lost his nerve. They were dashed into a tree,
+and--they were both dead--when they were got out from the wreck."
+
+"God in Heaven!" Mannering murmured, white to the lips.
+
+There was a silence between them. Mannering had covered his head with his
+hands. Hester tried once or twice to speak, but the tears were streaming
+from her eyes. She had the air of having more to say. The white horror of
+tragedy was still in her face.
+
+"There is a letter," she said at last. "She left a letter for you."
+
+Mannering rose slowly to his feet and moved to the lamp. Directly he had
+broken the seal he understood. He read the first line and looked up. His
+eyes met Hester's.
+
+"Who knows--this?" he asked, hoarsely.
+
+"No one! They had not been gone two hours. I explained everything."
+
+Then Mannering read on.
+
+ "My dear Husband:
+
+ "I call you that for the last time, for I am going off with Englehall
+ to Paris. Don't be too shocked, and don't despise me too much. I am
+ just a very ordinary woman, and I'm afraid I've bad blood in my veins.
+ Anyhow, I can't go on living under a glass case any longer. The old
+ life was rotten enough, but this is insupportable. I'm going to have a
+ fling, and after that I don't care what becomes of me.
+
+ "Now, Lawrence, I don't want you to blame yourself. I did think perhaps
+ that when we were married I might have got you to care for me a little,
+ but I suppose that was just my vanity. It wasn't very possible with a
+ woman like--well, never mind who--about. You did your best. You were
+ very nice and very kind to me last night, but it wasn't the real thing,
+ was it? I knew you hated being where you were. I could almost hear your
+ sigh of relief when I let you go. The fact of it is, our marriage was a
+ mistake. I ought to have been satisfied with your name, I suppose, and
+ the position it gave me, but I'm not that sort of woman. I've been in
+ Bohemia too long. I like cheery friends, even if their names are not in
+ Debrett, and I must have some one to care for me, or to pretend to care
+ for me. You know I've cared for you--only you in a certain way--but I'm
+ not heroic enough to be content with a shadowy love. I'm not an
+ idealist. Imagination doesn't content me in the least. I'd rather have
+ an inferior substance than ideal perfection. You see, I'm a very
+ commonplace person at heart, Lawrence--almost vulgar. But these are my
+ last words to you, so I've gone in for plain speaking. Now you're rid
+ of me.
+
+ "That's all! From your point of view I suppose, and your friends, I've
+ gone to the devil. Don't be too sure of it. I'm going to have a good
+ time, and when the end comes I'm willing to pay. If you are idiotic
+ enough to come after me, I shall be angry with you for the first time
+ in my life, and it wouldn't be the least bit of use. Englehall's an old
+ friend of mine, and he's a good sort. He's wanted me to do this often
+ enough for years, but I never felt quite like it. I believe he'd marry
+ me after, but he's got a wife shut up somewhere.
+
+ "I expect you think this a callous sort of letter. Well, I can't help
+ it. If it disgusts you with me, so much the better. I'm sorry for the
+ scandal, but you will get over that. Good-bye, Lawrence. Forgive me all
+ the bother I've been to you.
+
+ "Blanche."
+
+Mannering looked up from the letter, and again his eyes met Hester's. The
+secret was theirs alone. Very carefully he tore the pages into small
+pieces. Then he opened the stove and watched them consumed.
+
+"No one will ever know," Hester said. "She said--when she left--that it
+was a morning's ride--but motors were so uncertain that she took a bag."
+
+Mannering's eyes were filled once more with tears. The intolerable pity
+of the whole thing, its awful suddenness swept every other thought out of
+his mind. He remembered how anxiously she had tried to please him on that
+last night. He loathed himself for the cold brutality of his chilly
+affection. Hester came and knelt by his side, but she said nothing. So
+the hours passed.
+
+
+
+
+BOOK IV
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+THE PERSISTENCY OF BORROWDEAN
+
+
+"And what does Mannering think of it all, I wonder!" Lord Redford
+remarked, lighting a fresh cigarette. "This may be his opportunity, who
+can tell!"
+
+"Will he have the nerve to grasp it?" Borrowdean asked. "Mannering has
+never been proved in a crisis."
+
+"He may have the nerve. I should be more inclined to question the
+desire," Lord Redford said. "For a man in his position he has always
+seemed to me singularly unambitious. I don't think that the prospect of
+being Prime Minister would dazzle him in the least. It is part of the
+genius of the politician too, to know exactly when and how to seize an
+opportunity. I can imagine him watching it come, examining it through his
+eyeglass, and standing on one side with a shrug of the shoulders."
+
+"You do not believe, then," Berenice said, "that he is sufficiently in
+earnest to grasp it?"
+
+"Exactly," Lord Redford said. "I have that feeling about Mannering, I
+must admit, especially during the last two years. He seems to have drawn
+away from all of us, to live altogether too absorbed and self-contained
+a life for a man who has great ambitions to realize, or who is in
+downright earnest about his work."
+
+"What you all forget when you discuss Lawrence Mannering is this,"
+Berenice said. "He holds his position almost as a sacred charge. He is
+absolutely conscientious. He wants certain things for the sake of the
+people, and he will work steadily on until he gets them. I believe it is
+the truth that he has no personal ambition, but if the cause he has at
+heart is to be furthered at all it must be by his taking office.
+Therefore I think that when the time comes he will take it."
+
+"That sounds reasonable enough," Lord Redford admitted. "By the bye, did
+you notice that he is included in the house party at Sandringham again
+this week?"
+
+Anstruther, the youngest Cabinet Minister, and Lord Redford's nephew,
+joined in the conversation.
+
+"I can tell you something for a fact," he said. "My cousin is
+Lady-in-Waiting, and she's been up in town for a few days, and she asked
+me about Mannering. A Certain Personage thinks very highly of him indeed.
+Told some one that Mr. Mannering was the most statesman-like politician
+in the service of his country. I believe he'd sooner see Mannering Prime
+Minister than any one."
+
+"But he has no following," Borrowdean objected.
+
+"I think," Berenice said, slowly, "that he keeps as far aloof as possible
+for one reason, and one reason only. He avoids friendship, but he makes
+no enemies. He cultivates a neutral position whenever he can. What he is
+looking forward to, I am sure, is to found a coalition Government."
+
+"It is very possible," Lord Redford remarked. "I wonder if he will ask me
+to join."
+
+"Always selfish," Berenice laughed. "You men are all alike!"
+
+"On the contrary," Lord Redford answered, "my interest was purely
+patriotic. I cannot imagine the affairs of the country flourishing
+deprived of my valuable services. Let us go and wander through the
+crowd. Members of a Government in extremes like ours ought not to whisper
+together in corners. It gives rise to comment."
+
+Anstruther came hurrying up. He drew Redford on one side.
+
+"Mannering is here," he said, quietly. "Just arrived from Sandringham. He
+is looking for you."
+
+Almost as he spoke Mannering appeared. He did not at first see Berenice,
+and from the corner where she stood she watched him closely.
+
+It was two years since those few weeks at Bonestre, and during all that
+time they had scarcely met. Berenice knew that he had avoided her. For
+twelve months he had declined all social engagements, and since then he
+had pleaded the stress of political affairs as an excuse for leading the
+life almost of a recluse. Unseen herself, she studied him closely. He was
+much thinner, and every trace of his once healthy colouring had
+disappeared. His eyes seemed deeper set. There were streaks of grey in
+his hair. But for all that to her he was unaltered. He was still the one
+man in the world. She saw him shake hands with Lord Redford and draw him
+a little on one side.
+
+"Can you spare me five minutes?" he asked. "I have a matter to discuss
+with you."
+
+"Certainly!" Lord Redford answered. "I am leaving directly, and I might
+drive you home if you liked. We heard that you were at Sandringham."
+
+"I came up this afternoon," Mannering answered. "I heard that you were
+likely to be here, and as Lady Herrington had been kind enough to send me
+a card I came on."
+
+Lord Redford nodded.
+
+"Borrowdean and Anstruther are here too," he remarked. "We all felt in
+need of diversion. As you know very well, we're in a tight corner."
+
+Berenice came out from her place. At the sound of the rustling of her
+skirts both men turned their heads. She wore a gown of black velvet and a
+wonderful rope of pearls hung from her neck. She raised her hand and
+smiled at Mannering.
+
+"I am glad to see you again," she said, softly. "It is quite an age since
+we met, isn't it?"
+
+He held her hand for a moment. The touch of his fingers chilled her. He
+greeted her with quiet courtesy, but there was no answering smile upon
+his lips.
+
+"I have heard often of your movements from Clara," he said. "You have
+been very kind to her."
+
+"It has never occurred to me in that light," she said. "Clara needs a
+chaperon, and I need a companion. We were talking yesterday of going to
+Cairo for the winter. My only fear is that I am robbing you of your
+niece."
+
+"Please do not let that trouble you," he said. "Clara would be a most
+uncomfortable member of my household."
+
+"But are you never at all lonely?" she asked.
+
+"I never have time to think of such a thing," he answered. "Besides, I
+have Hester. She makes a wonderful secretary, and she seems to enjoy the
+work."
+
+"I should like to have a talk with you some time," she said. "Won't you
+come and see me?"
+
+He hesitated.
+
+"It is very kind of you to ask me," he said. "Don't think me churlish,
+but I go nowhere. I am trying to make up, you see, for my years of
+idleness."
+
+She looked at him steadfastly, and her heart sank. The change in
+his outward appearance seemed typical of some deeper and more final
+alteration in his whole nature. She felt herself powerless against the
+absolute impenetrability of his tone and manner. She felt that he had
+fought a battle within himself and conquered; that for some reason or
+other he had decided to walk no longer in the pleasanter paths of life.
+She had come to him unexpectedly, but he had shown no sign of emotion.
+Her influence over him seemed to be wholly a thing of the past. She made
+one more effort.
+
+"I think," she said, "that as one grows older one parts the less readily
+with the few friends who count. I hope that you will change your mind."
+
+He bowed gravely, but he made no answer. Berenice took Borrowdean's
+arm and passed on. There was a little spot of colour in her cheeks.
+Borrowdean felt nerved to his enterprise.
+
+"Let us go somewhere and sit down for a few minutes," he suggested. "The
+rooms are so hot this evening."
+
+She assented without words, and he found a solitary couch in one of the
+further apartments.
+
+"I wonder," he said, after a moment's pause, "whether I might say
+something to you, whether you would listen to me for a few minutes."
+
+Berenice was absorbed in her own thoughts. She allowed him to proceed.
+
+"For a good many years," he said, lowering his voice a little, "I have
+worked hard and done all I could to be successful. I wanted to have some
+sort of a position to offer. I am a Cabinet Minister now, and although I
+don't suppose we can last much longer this time, I shall have a place
+whenever we are in again."
+
+The sense of what he was saying began to dawn upon her. She stopped him
+at once.
+
+"Please do not say any more, Sir Leslie," she begged. "I should have
+given you credit for sufficient perception to have known beforehand the
+absolute impossibility of--of anything of the sort."
+
+"You are still a young woman," he said, quietly. "The world expects you
+to marry again."
+
+"I have no interest in what the world expects of me," she answered, "but
+I may tell you at once that my refusal has nothing whatever to do with
+the question of marriage in the abstract. You are a man of perception,
+Sir Leslie! It will be, I trust, sufficient if I say that I have no
+feelings whatever towards you which would induce me to consider the
+subject even for a moment."
+
+She was unchanged, then! This time he recognized the note of finality
+in her tone. All the time and thought he had given to this matter were
+wasted. He had failed, and he knew why. He seldom permitted himself the
+luxury of anger, but he felt all the poison of bitter hatred stirring
+within him at that moment, and craving for some sort of expression. There
+was nothing he could do, nothing he could say. But if Mannering had been
+within reach then he would have struck him. He rose and walked slowly
+away.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+
+HESTER THINKS IT "A GREAT PITY"
+
+
+"You will understand," Mannering said, as the brougham drove off, "that
+you and I are speaking together merely as friends. I have nothing
+official to say to you. It would be presumption on my part to assume that
+the time is ripe for anything definite while you are still at the head of
+an unbeaten Government. But one learns to read the signs of the times.
+I think that you and I both know that you cannot last the session."
+
+"It is a positive luxury at times," Redford answered, "to be able to
+indulge in absolute candour. We cannot last the session. You pulled us
+through our last tight corner, but we shall part, I suppose, on the New
+Tenement Bill, and then we shall come a cropper."
+
+Mannering nodded.
+
+"The Opposition," he said, "are not strong enough to form a Government
+alone. And I do not think that a one-man Cabinet would be popular. It
+has been suggested to me that at no time in political history have the
+conditions been more favourable for a really strong coalition Government,
+containing men of moderate views on both sides. I am anxious to know
+whether you would be willing to join such a combination."
+
+"Under whom?" Lord Redford asked.
+
+"Under myself," Mannering answered, gravely. "Don't think me
+over-presumptuous. The matter has been very carefully thought out. You
+could not serve under Rushleigh, nor could he serve under you. But you
+could both be invaluable members of a Cabinet of which I was the nominal
+head. I do not wish to entrap you into consent, however, without your
+fully understanding this: a modified, and to a certain extent an
+experimental, scheme of tariff reform would be part of our programme."
+
+"You wish for a reply," Lord Redford said, "only in general terms?"
+
+"Only in general terms, of course," Mannering assented.
+
+"Then you may take it," Lord Redford said, "that I should be proud to
+become a member of such a Government. Anything would be better than a
+fourth-party administration with Imperialism on the brain and rank
+Protection on their programme. They might do mischief which it would take
+centuries to undo."
+
+"We understand one another, Lord Redford," Mannering said, simply. "I am
+very much obliged to you. This is my turning."
+
+Mannering, when he found himself alone in his study, drew a little sigh
+of relief. He flung himself into an easy-chair, and sat with his hands
+pressed against his temples. The events of the day, from the morning at
+Sandringham to his recent conversation with Lord Redford, were certainly
+of sufficiently exciting a nature to provide him with food for thought.
+And yet his mind was full of one thing only, this chance meeting with
+Berenice. It was wonderful to him that she should have changed so little.
+He himself felt that the last two years were equal to a decade, that
+events on the other side of that line with which his life was riven were
+events with which some other person was concerned, certainly not the
+Lawrence Mannering of to-day. And yet he knew now that the battle which
+he had fought was far from a final one. Her power over him was unchanged.
+He was face to face once more with the old problem. His life was sworn to
+the service of the people. He had crowded his days with thoughts and
+deeds and plans for them. Almost every personal luxury and pleasure had
+been abnegated. He had found a sort of fierce delight in the asceticism
+of his daily life, in the unflinching firmness with which he had barred
+the gates which might lead him into smoother and happier ways. To-night
+he was beset with a sudden fear. He rose and looked at himself in the
+glass. He was pale and wan. His face lacked the robust vitality of a few
+years ago. He was ageing fast. He was conscious of certain disquieting
+symptoms in the routine of his daily life. He threw himself back into the
+chair with a little groan. The mockery of his life of ceaseless toil
+seemed suddenly to spread itself out before him, a grim and unlovely
+jest. What if his strength should go? What if all this labour and
+self-denial should be in vain? He found himself growing giddy at the
+thought.
+
+He rang the bell and ordered wine. Then he went to the telephone and rang
+up a doctor who lived near. Very soon, with coat and waistcoat off, he
+was going through a somewhat prolonged examination. Afterwards the doctor
+sat down opposite to him and accepted a cigar.
+
+"What made you send for me this evening?" he asked, curiously.
+
+Mannering hesitated.
+
+"An impulse," he said. "To-morrrow I should have no time to come to
+you. I wasn't feeling quite myself, and it is possible that I may be
+undertaking some very important work before long."
+
+"I shouldn't if I were you," the doctor remarked, quietly.
+
+"The work is of such a nature," Mannering said, "that I could not refuse
+it. It may not come, but if it does I must go through with it."
+
+"I doubt whether you will succeed," the doctor said. "There is nothing
+the matter with you except that you have been drawing on your reserve
+stock of strength to such an extent that you are on the verge of a
+collapse. The longer you stave it off the more complete it will be."
+
+"You are a Job's comforter," Mannering remarked, with a smile. "Send me
+some physic, and I will take things as easy as I can."
+
+"I'll send you some," the doctor answered, "but it won't do you much
+good. What you want is rest and amusement."
+
+Mannering laughed, and showed him out. When he returned to his study
+Hester was there, just returned from a visit to the theatre with some
+friends. She threw off her wrap and looked through the letters which had
+come by the evening's post.
+
+"Did you see this from Richard Fardell?" she asked him. "Parkins is dead
+at last. Fardell says that he has been quite childish for the last
+eighteen months! Are you ill?" she broke off, suddenly.
+
+Mannering, who was lying back in his easy-chair, white almost to the
+lips, roused himself with an effort. He poured out a glass of wine and
+drank it off.
+
+"I'm not ill," he said, with rather a weak smile, "but I'm a little
+tired."
+
+"Who was your visitor?" she asked.
+
+"A doctor. I felt a little run down, so I sent for him. Of course he told
+me the usual story. Rest and a holiday."
+
+She came and sat on the arm of his chair. Every year she grew less and
+less like her mother. Her hair was smoothly brushed back from her
+forehead, and her features were distinctly intellectual. She was by far
+the best secretary Mannering had ever had.
+
+"You need some one to look after you," she said, decisively.
+
+"It seems to me that you do that pretty well," he answered. "I don't want
+any one else."
+
+"You need some one with more authority than I have," she said. "You ought
+to marry."
+
+"Marry!" he gasped.
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Any particular person?"
+
+"Of course! You know whom."
+
+Mannering did not reply at once. He was looking steadfastly into the
+fire, and the gloom in his face was unlightened.
+
+"Hester," he said, at last, in a very low tone, "I will tell you, if you
+like, a short, a very short chapter of my life. It lasted a few hours, a
+day or so, more or less. Yet of course it has made a difference always."
+
+"I should like to hear it," she whispered.
+
+"The two great events of my life," he said, "came together. I was engaged
+to be married to the Duchess of Lenchester at the same time that I found
+myself forced to sever my connexion with the Liberal party. You know, of
+course, that the Duchess has always been a great figure in politics. She
+has ambitions, and her political creed is almost a part of the religion
+of her life. She looked upon my apostasy with horror. It came between us
+at the very moment when I thought that I had found in life the one great
+and beautiful thing."
+
+"If ever she let it come between you," Hester interrupted, softly, "I
+believe that she has repented. We women are quick to find out those
+things, you know," she added, "and I am sure that I am right. She has
+never married any one else. I do not believe that she ever will."
+
+"It is too late," Mannering said. "A union between us now could only lead
+to unhappiness. The disintegration of parties is slowly commencing, and I
+think that the next few years will find me still further apart than I am
+to-day from my old friends. Berenice"--he slipped so easily into calling
+her so--"is heart and soul with them."
+
+"At least," Hester said, "I think that for both your sakes you should
+give her the opportunity of choosing."
+
+"Even that," he said, "would not be wise. We are man and woman still, you
+see, Hester, and there are moments when sentiment is strong enough to
+triumph over principle and sweep our minds bare of all the every-day
+thoughts. But afterwards--there is always the afterwards. The conflict
+must come. Reason stays with us always, and sentiment might weaken with
+the years."
+
+She shook her head.
+
+"The Duchess is a woman," she said, "and the hold of all other things
+grows weak when she loves. Give her the chance."
+
+"Don't!" Mannering exclaimed, almost sharply. "You can't see this matter
+as I do. I have vowed my life now. I have seen my duty, and I have kept
+my face turned steadily towards it. Once I was contented with very
+different things, and I think that I came as near happiness then as a man
+often does. But those days have gone by. They have left a whole world of
+delightful memories, but I have locked the doors of the past behind me."
+
+Hester shook her head.
+
+"You are making a mistake," she said. "Two people who love one another,
+and who are honest in their opinions, find happiness sooner or later if
+they have the courage to seek for it. Don't you know," she continued,
+after a moment's pause, "that--she understood? I always like to think
+what I believe to be the truth. She went away to leave you free."
+
+Mannering rose to his feet and pointed to the clock.
+
+"It is time that you and I were in bed, Hester," he said. "Remember that
+we have a busy morning."
+
+"It seems a pity," she murmured, as she wished him good-night. "A great
+pity!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III
+
+SUMMONED TO WINDSOR
+
+
+Berenice, who had just returned from making a call, was standing in the
+hall, glancing through the cards displayed upon a small round table. The
+major-domo of her household came hurrying out from his office.
+
+"There is a young lady, your Grace," he announced, "who has been waiting
+to see you for half an hour. Her name is Miss Phillimore."
+
+"Where is she?" Berenice asked.
+
+"In the library, your Grace."
+
+"Show her into my own room," Berenice said, "I will see her at once."
+
+Hester was a little nervous, but Berenice set her immediately at her ease
+by the graciousness of her manner. They talked for some time of Bonestre.
+Then there was a moment's pause. Hester summoned up her courage.
+
+"I am afraid," she said, "that you may consider what I am going to say
+rather a liberty. I've thought it all out, and I decided to come to you.
+I couldn't see any other way."
+
+Berenice smiled encouragingly.
+
+"I will promise you," she said, "that I will consider it nothing of the
+sort."
+
+"That is very kind of you," Hester said. "I have come here because Mr.
+Mannering is the greatest friend I have in the world. He stands to me for
+all the relatives most girls have, and I am very fond of him indeed. I
+scarcely remember my father, but Mr. Mannering was always kind to me when
+I was a child. You know, perhaps, that I am living with him now as his
+secretary?"
+
+Berenice nodded pleasantly.
+
+"I see him every day," Hester continued, "and I notice things. He has
+changed a great deal during the last few years. I am getting very anxious
+about him."
+
+"He is not ill, I hope?" Berenice asked. "I too noticed a change. It
+grieved me very much."
+
+"He is simply working himself to death," Hester continued, "without
+relaxation or pleasure of any sort. And all the time he is unhappy. Other
+men, however hard they work, have their hobbies and their occasional
+holidays. He has neither. And I think that I know why. He fights all the
+time to forget."
+
+"To forget what?" Berenice asked, slowly turning her head.
+
+"To forget how near he came once to being very happy," Hester answered,
+boldly. "To forget--you!"
+
+Then her heart sang a little song of triumph, for she saw the instant
+change in the still, cold face turned now a little away from her. She saw
+the proud lips tremble and the unmistakable light leap out from the dark
+eyes. She saw the colour rush into the cheeks, and she had no more fear.
+She rose from her chair and dropped on one knee by Berenice's side.
+
+"Make him happy, please," she begged. "You can do it. You only! He loves
+you!"
+
+Berenice smiled, although her eyes were wet with tears. She laid her
+long, delicate fingers upon the other's hand.
+
+"But, my dear child," she protested, "what can I do? Mr. Mannering won't
+come near me. He won't even write to me. I can't take him by storm, can
+I?"
+
+"He is so foolish," Hester said, also smiling. "He will not understand
+how unimportant all other things are when two people care for one
+another. He talks about the difference in your politics, as though that
+were sufficient to keep you apart!"
+
+Berenice was silent for a moment.
+
+"There was a time," she said, softly, "when I thought so, too."
+
+"Exactly!" Hester declared. "And he doesn't know, of course, that you
+don't think so now."
+
+Berenice smiled slightly.
+
+"You must remember, dear," she said, "that Mr. Mannering and I are in
+rather a peculiar position. My great-grandfather, my father and my uncle
+were all Prime Ministers of England, and they were all staunch Liberals.
+My family has always taken its politics very seriously indeed, and so
+have I. It is not a little thing, this, after all."
+
+"But you will do it!" Hester exclaimed. "I am sure that you will."
+
+Berenice rose to her feet. A sense of excitement was suddenly quivering
+in her veins, her heart was beating fiercely. After all, this child
+was wise. She had been drifting into the dull, passionless life of a
+middle-aged woman. All the joys of youth seemed suddenly to be sweeping
+up from her heart, mocking the serenity of her days, these stagnant days,
+sheltered from the great winds of life, where the waves were ripples and
+the hours changeless. She raised her arms for a moment and dropped them
+to her side.
+
+"Oh, I do not know!" she cried. "It is such an upheaval. If he were
+here--if he asked me himself. But he will never come now."
+
+"I believe that he would come to-morrow," Hester said, "if he were
+sure--"
+
+Berenice laughed softly. There was colour in her cheeks as she turned to
+Hester.
+
+"Tell him to come and have tea with me to-morrow afternoon," she said. "I
+shall be quite alone."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Hester felt all her confidence slipping away from her. The echoes of her
+breathless, passionate words had scarcely died away, and Mannering, to
+all appearance, was unmoved. His still, cold face showed no signs of
+agitation, his dark, beringed eyes were full of nothing but an intense
+weariness.
+
+"Do I understand, Hester," he asked, "that you have been to see the
+Duchess?--that you have spoken of these things to her?"
+
+Her heart sank. His tone was almost censorious. Nevertheless, she stood
+her ground.
+
+"Yes! I have told you the truth. And I am glad that I went. You are very
+clever people, both of you, but you are spoiling your lives for the sake
+of a little common sense. It was necessary for some one to interfere."
+
+Mannering shook his head slowly.
+
+"You meant kindly, Hester," he said, "but it was a mistake. The time when
+that might have been possible has gone by. Neither she nor I can call
+back the hand of time. The last two years have made an old man of me. I
+have no longer my enthusiasm. I am in the whirlpool, and I must fight my
+way through to the end."
+
+She sat at his feet. He was still in the easy-chair into which he had
+sunk on his first coming into the room. He had been speaking in the House
+late, amidst all the excitement of a political crisis.
+
+"Why fight alone," she murmured, "when she is willing to come to you?"
+
+He shook his head.
+
+"There would be conditions," he said, "and she would not understand. I
+may be in office in a month with most of her friends in opposition. The
+situation would be impossible!"
+
+"Rubbish!" Hester declared. "The Duchess is too great a woman to lose so
+utterly her sense of proportion. Don't you understand--that she loves
+you?"
+
+Mannering laughed bitterly.
+
+"She must love a shadow, then!" he said, "for the man she knew does not
+exist any longer. Poor little girl, are you disappointed?" he added, more
+kindly. "I am sorry!"
+
+"I am disappointed to hear you talking like this," she declared. "I will
+not believe that it is more than a mood. You are overtired, perhaps!"
+
+"Ay!" he said. "But I have been overtired for a long time. The strength
+the gods give us lasts a weary while. You must send my excuses to the
+Duchess, Hester. The fates are leading me another way."
+
+"I won't do it," she sobbed. "You shall be reasonable! I will make you
+go!"
+
+He shook his head.
+
+"If you could," he murmured, "you might alter the writing on one little
+page of history. We defeated the Government to-night badly, and I am
+going to Windsor to-morrow afternoon."
+
+Hester rose to her feet and paced the room restlessly. Mannering had
+spoken without exultation. His pallid face seemed to her to have grown
+thin and hard. He saw himself the possible Prime Minister of the morrow
+without the slightest suggestion of any sort of gratified ambition.
+
+"I don't know whether to say that I am glad or not," Hester declared,
+stopping once more by his side. "If you are going to shut yourself off
+from everything else in life which makes for happiness, to forget that
+you are a man, and turn yourself into a law-making machine, well, then,
+I am sorry. I think that your success will be a curse to you. I think
+that you will live to regret it."
+
+Mannering looked at her for a moment with a gleam of his old self shining
+out of his eyes. A sudden pathos, a wave of self-pity had softened his
+face.
+
+"Dear child!" he said, gravely, "I cannot make you understand. I carry
+a burden from which no one can free me. For good or for evil the powers
+that be have set my feet in the path of the climbers, and for the sake of
+those whose sufferings I have seen I must struggle upwards to the end.
+Berenice and the Duchess of Lenchester are two very different persons. I
+cannot take one into my life without the other. It is because I love her,
+Hester, that I let her go. Good-night, child!"
+
+She kissed his hand and went slowly to her room, stumbling upstairs
+through a mist of tears. There was nothing more that she could do.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV
+
+CHECKMATE TO BORROWDEAN
+
+
+Mannering's town house, none too large at any time, was transformed into
+a little hive of industry. Two hurriedly appointed secretaries were at
+work in the dining-room, and Hester was busy typing in her own little
+sanctum.
+
+Mannering sat in his study before a table covered with papers, and for
+the first time during the day was alone for a few moments.
+
+His servant brought in a card. Mannering glanced at it and frowned.
+
+"The gentleman said that he would not keep you for more than a moment,
+sir," the servant announced quietly, mindful of the half-sovereign which
+had been slipped into his hand.
+
+Mannering still looked at the card doubtfully.
+
+"You can show him up," he said at last.
+
+"Very good, sir!"
+
+The man withdrew, and reappeared to usher in Sir Leslie Borrowdean.
+Mannering greeted him without offering his hand.
+
+"You wished to see me, Sir Leslie?" he asked.
+
+Borrowdean came slowly into the room. He closed the door behind him.
+
+"I hope," he said, "that you will not consider my presence an intrusion!"
+
+"You have business with me, I presume," Mannering answered, coldly. "Pray
+sit down."
+
+Borrowdean ignored the chair, towards which Mannering had motioned. He
+came and stood by the side of the table.
+
+"Unless your memory, Mannering," he said, with a hard little laugh, "is
+as short as the proverbial politician's, you can scarcely be surprised at
+my visit."
+
+Mannering raised his eyebrows, and said nothing.
+
+"I must confess," Borrowdean continued, "that I scarcely expected to find
+it necessary for me to come here and remind you that it was I who am
+responsible for your reappearance in politics."
+
+"I am not likely," Mannering said, slowly, "to forget your good offices
+in that respect."
+
+"I felt sure that you would not," Borrowdean answered. "Yet you must not
+altogether blame me for my coming! I understand that the list of your
+proposed Cabinet is to be completed to-morrow afternoon, and as yet I
+have heard nothing from you."
+
+"Your information," Mannering said, "is quite correct. In fact, my list
+is complete already. If your visit here is one of curiosity, I have no
+objection to gratify it. Here is a list of the names I have selected."
+
+He handed a sheet of paper to Borrowdean, who glanced it eagerly down.
+Afterwards he looked up and met Mannering's calm gaze. There was an
+absolute silence for several seconds.
+
+"My name," Borrowdean said, hoarsely, "is not amongst these!"
+
+"It really never occurred to me for a single second to place it there,"
+Mannering answered.
+
+Borrowdean drew a little breath. He was deathly pale.
+
+"You include Redford," he said. "He is a more violent partizan than I
+have ever been. I have heard you say a dozen times that you disapprove of
+turning a man out of office directly he has got into the swing of it. Has
+any one any fault to find with me? I have done my duty, and done it
+thoroughly. I don't know what your programme may be, but if Redford can
+accept it I am sure that I can."
+
+"Possibly," Mannering answered. "I have this peculiarity, though. Call it
+a whim, if you like. I desire to see my Cabinet composed of honourable
+men."
+
+Borrowdean started back as though he had received a blow.
+
+"Am I to accept that as a statement of your opinion of me?" he demanded.
+
+"It seems fairly obvious," Mannering answered, "that such was my
+intention."
+
+"You owe your place in public life to me," Borrowdean exclaimed.
+
+"If I do," Mannering answered, "do you imagine that I consider myself
+your debtor? I tell you that to-day, at this moment, I have no political
+ambitions. Before you appeared at Blakely and commenced your underhand
+scheming, I was a contented, almost a happy man. You imagined that my
+reappearance in political life would be beneficial to you, and with that
+in view, and that only, you set yourself to get me back. You succeeded!
+We won't say how! If you are disappointed with the result what concern
+is that of mine? You have called yourself my friend. I have not for some
+time considered you as such. I owe you nothing. I have no feeling for
+you save one of contempt. To me you figure as the modern political
+adventurer, living on his wits and the credulity of other people. Better
+see how it will pay you in opposition."
+
+Borrowdean, a cold-blooded and calculating man, knew for the first time
+in his life what it was to let his passions govern him. Every word which
+this man had spoken was truth, and therefore all the more bitter to hear.
+He saw himself beaten and humiliated, outwitted by the man whom he had
+sought to make his tool. A slow paroxysm of anger held him rigid. He was
+white to the lips. His nerves and senses were all tingling. There was red
+fire before his eyes.
+
+"If your business with me is ended," Mannering said, waving his hand
+towards the door, "you will forgive me if I remind you that I am much
+occupied."
+
+Borrowdean snatched up the square glass paper cutter from the table, and
+without a second's warning he struck Mannering with it full upon the
+temple.
+
+"Damn you!" he said.
+
+Mannering tried to struggle to his feet, but collapsed, and fell upon the
+floor. Borrowdean kicked his prostrate body.
+
+"Now go and form your Cabinet," he muttered. "May you wake in hell!"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Borrowdean, who left the study a madman, was a sane person the moment
+he began to descend the stairs and found himself face to face with a
+tall, heavily cloaked woman. The flash of familiar jewels in her hair,
+something, perhaps, in the quiet stateliness of her movements, betrayed
+her identity to him. His heart gave a quick jump. A sickening fear stole
+over him. He barred the way.
+
+"Duchess!" he exclaimed.
+
+She waved him aside with an impatient gesture. He could see the frown
+gathering upon her face.
+
+"Sir Leslie!" she replied. "Please let me pass! I want to see Mr.
+Mannering before any one else goes up!"
+
+Sir Leslie drew immediately to one side.
+
+"Pray do not let me detain you," he said, coolly. "Between ourselves, I
+do not think that Mannering is in a fit state to see anybody. I have not
+been able to get a coherent word out of him. He walks all the time
+backwards and forwards like a man demented."
+
+Berenice smiled slightly.
+
+"You are annoyed," she declared, "because you will be in opposition once
+more!"
+
+"If I go into opposition again," Borrowdean answered, "it will be my own
+choice. Mannering has asked me to join his Cabinet."
+
+Berenice raised her eyebrows. Her surprise was genuine.
+
+"You amaze me!" she declared.
+
+"I was amazed myself," he answered.
+
+She passed on her way, and Borrowdean descending, took a cab quietly
+home. Berenice, with her hand upon the door, hesitated. Hester had
+purposely sent her up alone. They had waited until they had heard
+Borrowdean leave the room. And now at the last moment she hesitated. She
+was a proud woman. She was departing now, for his sake, from the
+conventions of a lifetime. He had declined to come to her; no matter, she
+had come to him instead. Suppose--he should not be glad? Suppose she
+should fail to see in his face her justification? It was very quiet in
+the room. She could not even hear the scratching of his pen. Twice her
+fingers closed upon the knob of the door, and twice she hesitated. If it
+had not been for facing Hester below she would probably have gone
+silently away.
+
+And then--she heard a sound. It was not at all the sort of sound for
+which she had been listening, but it brought her hesitation to a sudden
+end. She threw open the door, and a little cry of amazement broke from
+her trembling lips. It was indeed a groan which she had heard. Mannering
+was stretched upon the floor, his eyes half closed, his face ghastly
+white. For a moment she stood motionless, a whole torrent of arrested
+speech upon her quivering lips. Then she dropped on her knees by his side
+and lifted his cold hand.
+
+"Oh, my love!" she murmured. "My love!"
+
+But he made no sign. Then she stood up, and her cry of horror rang
+through the house.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V
+
+A BRAZEN PROCEEDING
+
+
+Mannering opened his eyes lazily. His companion had stopped suddenly in
+his reading. He appeared to be examining a certain paragraph in the paper
+with much interest. Mannering stretched out his hand for a match, and
+relit his cigarette.
+
+"Read it out, Richard," he said. "Don't mind me."
+
+The young man started slightly.
+
+"I am very sorry, sir," he said. "I thought that you were asleep!"
+
+Mannering smiled.
+
+"What about the paragraph?" he asked.
+
+"It is just this," Richard answered, reading. "'The Duchess of Lenchester
+and Miss Clara Mannering have arrived at Claridge's from the South of
+Italy.'"
+
+Mannering looked at him keenly.
+
+"I am curious to know which part of that announcement you find so
+interesting," he said.
+
+"Certainly not the latter part, sir," the young man answered. "I thought
+perhaps you would have noticed--I meant to speak to you as soon as you
+were a little stronger--I have asked Hester to be my wife!"
+
+"Then all I can say," Mannering declared, gravely, "is, that you are a
+remarkably sensible young man. I am quite strong enough to bear a shock
+of that sort."
+
+"I'm very glad to hear you say so, sir," Richard said. "Of course I
+shouldn't think of taking her away until you were quite yourself again."
+
+"The cheek of the young man!" Mannering murmured. "She wouldn't go!"
+
+"I don't believe she would," Richard laughed. "Of course we consider that
+you are very nearly well now."
+
+"You can consider what you like," Mannering answered, "but I shall remain
+an invalid as long as it pleases me."
+
+Hester appeared on the upper lawn, and Richard rose up at once.
+
+"If you don't mind, sir," he said, "I think that I should like to go and
+tell Hester that I have spoken to you."
+
+Mannering nodded. He watched the two young people stroll off together
+towards the rose-garden, talking earnestly. He heard the little iron gate
+open and close. He watched them disappear behind the hedge of laurels. A
+puff of breeze brought the faint odour of roses to him, and with it a
+sudden host of memories. His eyes grew wistful. He felt something tugging
+at his heartstrings. Only a few years ago life here had seemed so
+wonderful a thing--only a few years, but with all the passions and
+struggles of a lifetime crowded into them. The maelstrom was there still,
+but he himself had crept out of it. What was there left? Peace, haunted
+with memories, rest, troubled by desire. He heard the sound of their
+voices in the rose-garden, and he turned away with a pain in his heart of
+which he was ashamed. These things were for the young! If youth had
+passed him by, still there were compensations!
+
+Compensations, aye--but he wanted none of them! He picked up the
+newspaper, and with a little difficulty, for his sight was not yet good,
+found a certain paragraph. Then the paper slipped again from his fingers,
+and he heard the sweeping of a woman's dress across the smooth-shaven
+lawn. He gripped the sides of his chair and set his teeth hard. He
+struggled to rise, but she moved swiftly up to him with a gesture of
+remonstrance.
+
+"Please don't move," she exclaimed, as though her coming were the most
+natural thing in the world. "I am going to sit down with you, if I may!"
+
+He murmured an expression of conventional delight. She wore a dress of
+some soft white material, and her figure was as wonderful as ever. He
+recovered himself almost at once and studied her admiringly.
+
+"Paris?" he murmured.
+
+"Paquin!" she answered. "I remembered that you liked me in white."
+
+"But where on earth have you come from?" he asked.
+
+"The Farm," she answered. "I'm going to take it for three months--if
+you're decent to me!"
+
+"That rascal Richard!" he muttered. "Never told me a word! Pretended to
+be surprised when he heard you and Clara were back."
+
+She nodded.
+
+"Clara is going to marry that Frenchman next month," she said, "and I
+shall be looking for another companion. Do you know of one?"
+
+"I haven't another niece," he answered.
+
+"Even if you had," she said, "I have come to the conclusion that I want
+something different. Will you listen to me patiently for a moment?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Will you marry me, please?" she said. "No, don't interrupt. I want there
+to be no misunderstandings this time. I don't care whether you are an
+invalid or not. I don't care whether you are going back into politics or
+not. I don't care whether we live here or in any other corner of the
+world. You can call yourself anything, from an anarchist to a Tory--or be
+anything. You can have all your workingmen here to dinner in flannel
+shirts, if you like, and I'll play bowls with their wives on the lawn.
+Nothing matters but this one thing, Lawrence. Will you marry me--and try
+to care a little?"
+
+"This is absolutely," Mannering declared, taking her into his arms, "the
+most brazen proceeding!"
+
+"It's a good deal better than the bungle we made of it before," she
+murmured.
+
+
+THE END
+
+
+
+
+ * * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+E. Phillips Oppenheim's Novels
+
+
+A PRINCE OF SINNERS
+
+Thoroughly matured, brilliantly constructed, and convincingly
+told.--_London Times_.
+
+It is rare that so much knowledge of the world, taken as a whole, is
+set between two covers of a novel.--_Chicago Daily News_.
+
+
+ANNA THE ADVENTURESS
+
+A story of London life that is at once unusual, original, consistent,
+and delightful.--_Buffalo Express_.
+
+An entrancing story which has seldom been surpassed as a study of
+feminine character and sentiment.--_Outlook_, London.
+
+
+ENOCH STRONE
+
+In no other novel has Mr. Oppenheim created such life-like characters
+or handled his plot with such admirable force and restraint as in this
+capital story of the career of masterful Enoch Strone.
+
+
+A SLEEPING MEMORY
+
+A story in occultism, but with all its mysticism and its dealings with
+the unknowable the book is never dull, the thread of the human story
+in it is never lost sight of for a moment.--_Boston Transcript_.
+
+
+MYSTERIOUS MR. SABIN
+
+Emphatically a good story--strong, bold, original, and admirably
+told.--_Literature_, London.
+
+Intensely readable for the dramatic force with which the story is
+told, the absolute originality of the underlying creative thought, and
+the strength of all the men and women who fill the pages.--_Pittsburgh
+Times_.
+
+
+THE YELLOW CRAYON
+
+_Containing the Further Adventures of "Mysterious
+Mr. Sabin"_
+
+The efforts of Mr. Sabin, one of Mr. Oppenheim's most fascinating
+characters, to free his wife from an entanglement with the Order of
+the Yellow Crayon, give the author one of his most complicated and
+absorbing plots. A number of the characters of "Mysterious Mr.
+Sabin" figure in this delightful work.
+
+
+THE TRAITORS
+
+A brilliant and engrossing story of love and adventure and Russian
+political intrigue. A revolution, the recall of an exiled king, the
+defence of his dominion against Turkish aggression, furnish a series
+of exciting pictures and dramatic situations.
+
+
+THE BETRAYAL
+
+In none of Mr. Oppenheim's fascinating and absorbing books has
+he better illustrated his remarkable faculty for holding the reader's
+interest to the end than in "The Betrayal." The efforts of the
+French Secret Service to obtain important papers relating to the
+Coast Defence of England are the _motif_ of its remarkable plot.
+
+
+A MILLIONAIRE OF YESTERDAY
+
+Mr. Oppenheim has never written a better story than "A Millionaire
+of Yesterday." He grips the reader's attention at the start by
+his vivid picture of the two men in the West African bush making a
+grim fight for life and fortune, and he holds it to the finish. The
+volume is thrilling throughout, while the style is excellent.
+
+
+THE MAN AND HIS KINGDOM
+
+This brilliant, nervous, and intensely dramatic tale of love, intrigue,
+and revolution in a South American State is so human and life-like
+that the reader is bewildered by the writer's evident daring, and his
+equal fidelity to things as they are.
+
+
+THE LOST LEADER
+
+As fascinating a story of modern life as a novelist has yet conceived
+and one that arrests the mind by its fine strenuousness of purpose.
+
+
+THE MALEFACTOR
+
+This amazing story of the strange revenge of Sir Wingrave Seton,
+who suffered imprisonment for a crime he did not commit rather than
+defend himself at a woman's expense, "will make the most languid
+alive with expectant interest," says the _Chicago Record-Herald_.
+
+
+A MAKER OF HISTORY
+
+A story of absorbing interest turning on a complicated plot worked
+out with dexterous craftsmanship. A capital yarn of European secret
+service.--_Literary Digest_.
+
+
+THE MASTER MUMMER
+
+Will be found of absorbing interest to those who love a story of
+action and romance.--_Academy_, London.
+
+
+
+***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK A LOST LEADER***
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